Four Steps To Destroy The Future

by JoeTheEconomist September 21, 2013 11:02 AM

When Social Security was originally conceived, the system was not a generational wealth transfer or ponzi scheme. Social Security was designed to be funded by workers not financed by their children.

Since that time, the system's finances have deteriorated to the point where the financing gap is nearly the size of our entire GDP. So what the hell happened? How to destroy the future in four easy steps.

1. Cut Costs On Voters

The original law included automatic tax increases which would have increased the cost of Social Security to 6% of wages from its 2% base. Congress waived every increase, one of which required a Congressional override of FDR's Veto. Funding for Social Security did not reach the originally envisioned 6% until 1960. Self-employed workers would not pay 6% until the 1970s.

These tax-cuts transformed Social Security from a system paid by workers to a system financed by children.

2. Make Promises From The Pockets Of Non-Voters

Congress raised benefits every election year in the 1950s. Social Security Act Amendments of 1950, 1952, 1954, 1956, 1958 all increased benefits. These increased the value of existing benefits, created new benefits, or expanded coverage to more Americans. The 1950 Amendment raised benefits by 77%, 1952 (12.5%), 1954 (13%), 1956(added disability), 1958 (7%). (source)

A couple retiring in 1960 expected to collect $8 of benefits for every $1 of contribution. Basically Congress was selling dollars of benefits to voters for little more than a dime. The difference was largely passed on to future generations who had no vote in 1950.

3. Allow The Federal Reserve To Lower Interest Rates At A Cost Of $1.2 trillion of projected interest income (in 2012 alone)

In 2011, projected interest income over the life of the Trust Fund was (3.6 trillion)

In 2012, projected interest income over the life of the Trust Fund was (2.4 trillion)

Thanks Ben Bernanke.

4. Ignore The Problem

Social Security almost reached insolvency in 1983. At that time, Social Security had more than 40 years of promises embedded in a system that did not have a penny to pay them. The solution to these problems in 1983? Repeat step 1. Repeat step 2. Prepare for step 3. The solution to these problems in 2013? Repeat step 1. Repeat step 2.

Terrorizing The Elderly

by JoeTheEconomist August 31, 2013 10:50 AM
Monday, the government opened the season of its favorite sport: terrorizing the elderly and the infirm. Washington wants more money. So it threatens the most defendless in our society.
 
This is the same Secretary Jaboc Lew who signed a letter to Congress a few months back that said the Social Security Trust Fund had enough cash by ITSELF to pay benefits for more than three years (page 4). The latest figures show that the trust fund has roughly $2.8 trillion in assets. The only possible way that Social Security will not have cash sufficient to meet its bills for years to come is if the man running it is completely.
 
For all of its long-term financial problems, Social Security has a very solid network of near-term funding sources. The bonds held by the Social Security Trust Fund can be refinanced without adding to the total level of government debt. If the Secretary feels that the government might not be in a position to refinance the debt, he should build a cash reserve today in preparation for that possibility. On top of the trust fund, the system collects a portion of payroll taxes. If there were any truth to the letter, Secretary Lew would be fired for breach of his fiduciary responsibility.
 
Here is proof that reality is stranger than fiction. When Social Security has excess cash, it is required to invest it in government securities. Unfortunately, the government will not be able to issue more debt. So any excess cash would sit uninvested, while the rest of the government is unable to borrow it.
 
It is time to remove politics from Social Security. The system needs an independent managing trustee who does not view the elderly and infirm as cattle to prod. The idea that Social Security might not have cash to pay benefits in October is meant to create fear in the elderly rather than inform the public. It is despicable behavior.

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Deficit

Immigration And Social Security

by JoeTheEconomist June 17, 2013 10:13 AM

DC and its think tanks are selling the idea that Immigration Reform will help fix Social Security.  For example, "Improving Lives, Strengthening Finances: The Benefits of Immigration Reform to Social Security".  Without making any statement on the merits of Immigration Reform, there seems to be little actual research that supports the idea that Immigration Reform will improve the outlook of Social Security. 

There are not any reforms on the table for the Social Security Administration to score.  But I make the statement based on information that the SSA has already provided.

First, undocumented workers provide a stable source of unattached revenue.  When Americans pay payroll taxes, the revenue creates future costs in the form of promised benefits.  Undocumented workers cannot collect Social Security benefits.  Millions of undocumented workers pay payroll taxes by either using someone else’s Social Security card or by using a false name and Social Security number.  The Social Security Administration estimated that this revenue exceeded 10 billion dollars in 2010.  Losing free revenue cannot help Social Security.

Second, the demographic mix of workers affects Social Security.  If the immigration reform brings in a higher percentage of single workers, or high-paid workers, or workers that work longer than 35 years then immigration reform may help improve the picture of Social Security.  None of the media reports suggest that the system will enjoy more profitable demographics.  And to be clear, improve the picture of Social Security and fix Social Security are trillions of dollars apart. 

Third, immigrants tend to be a very poor demographic to add to the mix of Social Security because they do not have parents that depend upon the system.  Social Security is an electorial priority.  Voters elect Congress which sets the payroll taxes, which dictates the level of benefits.  We are adding an audience that has no value to parental support.  This change will overtime work its way into our representative government.  Unless the individual prospects of Social Security are dramatically improved for workers - we should expect immigration reform to negatively affect support for the system.

What supporters of Immigration Reform are saying is that Social Security will enjoy a boost in the number of workers.  More workers equals more revenue - but they ignore the cost of taking that revenue.  It may help Social Security in the short-term, but longer term it will make the system even more unworkable.  This is not a good trade-off for the system or the people who will depend upon the system in the future.

The point here isn't the immigration reform is wrong, but the people who tell you that Immigration Reform will fix Social Security are wrong.

 

 

Pew Research : Retirement Across Generations

by JoeTheEconomist May 30, 2013 7:55 AM

Pew Research has produced a report on the preparedness of generations for retirement. 

"When the Great Recession hit in 2007, the oldest baby boomers faced the real possibility of downward mobility just as they were entering their golden years.The downturn also heightened concerns about retirement planning—or lack of planning—by younger generations. Many younger Americans were already behind in saving for retirement, and suddenly millions of them were out of work or owned homes worth far less than they had been just a few years earlier"  (read more)

The research includes expected revenue from Social Security.  It reports the expected benefit levels to continue forever.  This will significantly overstate the preparedness of early Boomers.  According to the report, various studies have shown that pensions (such as Social Security) contribute as much as 50 percent to the household wealth projections. (See the full study)

If Fixing Social Security Were Easy, It Would Already Be Done

by JoeTheEconomist May 7, 2013 5:48 AM

If fixing Social Security were easy, it would already be done.  Politicians are paid to hide problems, not solutions from the electorate. 

Nonetheless, the mainstream media continues to say that Social Security is an easy fix.  Typically the line runs something like “Social Security has become the focal point of entitlement debate because it's so easy to find different ways to address its funding problems.”  Basically, the hardest part of fixing Social Security is choosing from so many different options. 

A lot of the ease comes from changing the meaning of words.  The first word to lose its meaning is the word ‘fixed’.  Normally, the word ‘fixed’ means that there is no problem. In the Social Security debate, the word fixed means solvent, or the cost to make our problem a problem for our children.  Solvent and fixed are about 12 trillion dollars apart.  So, saying that fixing Social Security is easy, essentially is comparable to saying it is easy to run a 4 minute mile without telling anyone that the mile is actually only a 100 yards long.

The debate about fixing Social Security isn’t about fixing the system.  It is about paying for it.  The discussion is entirely about increasing revenue or decreasing expense.  The best example of this false dichotomy is the discussion of the COLA change to Chain-CPI.  Social Security is intended to be old-age insurance.  Yet, we are looking at a ‘fix’ which progressively reduces benefits as one gets older.  In all honesty, this is no different than fixing a broken refrigerator by calling it a doorstop.

If we are going to increase revenue, we have to understand that there are three kinds of revenue in Social Security.  The Social Security Trust Fund is funded money.  Contributions are revenue financed with the promise of future benefits.  Finally there are taxes, or the part of the part of payroll taxes on which there is no economic return.  In terms of a house, the word ‘funded’ means that you own the house.  Financed revenue is the loan from the bank.  Tax revenue means that the bank bought the house for you out of the goodness of its heart.

None of these revenue sources provides a stable solution.  Today, the Trust Fund provides about a nickel or a dime per dollar of benefits, but that contribution will go away as the Trust Fund is depleted.  Increasing the level of contributions - say immigration reform - only creates the promise of larger benefits in the future.  This enables us to postpone our problem, but creates an even larger problem for our children. 

The only other type of money in the system is taxes which is a dangerous game for old-age insurance because taxes are a political priority.  FDR rejected this model.  In 1941, he said that the contributions were vital as a means to ensure workers ‘a legal, moral, and political’ right to benefits.  He understood that taxes are dependent upon shifting political priorities.  FDR saw that contributions were the only way to make sure that ‘no damn politician could ever scrap' his program.[1] 

The other problem with increasing tax revenue for Social Security is that it makes it more difficult to raising taxes to control the debt.  We aren't raising taxes as much as we are shifting the taxbase away from debt control to Social Security.  This strategy preserves the debt load for the future generations on whom Social Security depends.

Decreasing benefits is possible, but it is difficult to sell.  The reality of decreasing benefits is that politicians would have to explain to voters that they never made a contribution on which they can expect to collect benefits.  They actually paid a tax on which they collect nothing.  This alternative is very difficult because these same politicians are the ones who have said for years that there is no problem in Social Security.

Every easy solution has a loser, and trying to convince that person that losing is winning is never easy.  So how does the media get back to easy.  We cut the benefits of future generations, and raise taxes on future generations.  It is easy to say that future generations will pay taxes that we will not.  It is easy to say future generations will accept benefit cuts that we will not.  In that context, it is very easy to say that Social Security is easy to fix. 

1 :  The exact quote is : "(Contributions) are politics all the way through. We put those pay roll contributions there so as to give the contributors a legal, moral, and political right to collect their pensions and their unemployment benefits. With those taxes in there, no damn politician can ever scrap my social security program. Those taxes aren’t a matter of economics, they’re straight politics.” (source)

What's Next for Social Security?

by Guest_Post April 25, 2013 4:48 AM

We cover a number of Chuck Saletta's pieces on Social Security.  This piece is worth reading because it is well written and well thought.

"Over the last several years, the news about Social Security's long-term health has gotten progressively worse. With nearly every passing year, the Social Security Administration's annual Trustees' Report has pulled forward the date when the Social Security Trust Funds are expected to run out of cash."

The article spells out the problem and the consequences.  It tells you about the problem, and what is being done about the problems.

Simpson/Bowles 2.0

by JoeTheEconomist April 24, 2013 3:32 AM

Last week, the authors of the Simpson-Bowles plan released an updated version of their plan.  The part pertaining to Social Security can be found in Appendix A on page 41.  The key phrase is : Unfortunately since the Fiscal Commission proposal was released, the 75 year shortfall actuarial shortfall has increased significantly" 

In football, we throw to where the receiver will be.  In DC, we throw to where the problem looks smallest and most remote.  This is why we measure Social Security by the 75 year solvency. 

The 75 year window is a bad measure of Social Security's security because it makes the problem appear smaller and far away.  How? The figure does not include the financing costs of the system.  It shows the payroll taxes we collect today as revenue, but does not include the cost of benefits associated with taking that revenue.  

Solving the problem for 2010 through 2085 is completely different from 2013 through 2088 because you are bring on the cost of future benefits. In five years, fixing Social Security will be defined by 2018 through 2093 and once again we will have a problem.  Soon enough we will be right back where we were in 2010. 

This is why Social Security has been 'solvent' three times in my life.

 

Social Security And The Safety-Net

by JoeTheEconomist April 1, 2013 7:33 AM

One of the more dangerous arguments in the debate about Social Security is the growing belief that Social Security is part of the social safety-net that protects the poor.  This argument has bled into the lexicon of both parties, and become a standard for media analysis of any proposal to reform the system. 

There is one problem: Social Security isn’t a safety-net, nor is it designed to act as one. Yes, the formula rewards people progressively less as they earn more. Yes, the formula reduces benefits for people who saved for their own retirement. But nowhere does Social Security pay people based on need.

The formula has more than 2,000 rules which change the benefits based on whether you have kids or how many times you marry. The benefit formula rewards people for living longer. The benefit formula rewards people who work longer.  No where in these formulas does the system pay more money to people because they are in need.

The formula allocates the largest amount of resources to people who contributed the most in the past, live the longest, have the most qualifying ex-wives, and have the most children after the age of 65.  Social Security pays the most to someone like Pete Stark.  Who is Pete Stark? An ex-Congressman who is wealthy by Congressional standards.

He will collect the maximum payment allowed by Social Security.  He is apt to live longer than most Americans.  He married three times, giving the system three potential wives to collect survivor benefits from Social Security.  The last wife produced 3 children all of whom have been eligible for Social Security almost since birth. 

On the other side of Pete Stark, Social Security will allocate zero resources to people who worked for Central Falls, a small town in Rhode Island which faces bankruptcy.  Like many towns and municipalities, Central Falls did not put its employees into Social Security.  With their pensions gone in bankruptcy, the people who retired from the city will have significant needs and no way to collect from Social Security.  The reason is that Social Security isn’t a safety-net.

CBO Releases New Data On Social Security

by JoeTheEconomist February 7, 2013 15:37 PM

Jed Graham, who writes for IBD, discusses new Congressional Budget Office projection showing a worsening financial outlook for Social Security:

“Social Security's financial outlook took another hit this week, as the Congressional Budget Office hiked its estimate for cash deficits from 2013 to 2022 by $212 billion.”   (Read "Social Security Trust Fund Likely To Run Out In 2031")

The article says that "Meanwhile, workers 44 years old who may be more than halfway through their working careers face the prospect of retiring after the trust fund is bust."  It appears that the writer assumes people will retire at 62, which is an option for less than half of Americans.  For people who expect to retire at full retirement age, 49 years-old is the point where workers expect to retire after the trust fund is gone.  Anyone 66 or younger expects to live long enough to have benefits cut.

Social Security – 2012 Results

by Guest_Post December 5, 2012 9:20 AM
We reprint articles with the permission of Bruce Kasting. 
The full article can be found at : http://brucekrasting.com/social-security-2012-results/
 
Social Security (SS) has released its estimates for the December data for benefits payed and taxes received. With this info, I can estimate the 2012 results that will be formally reported in five-months. It was a ho-hummer of a year for SS, it tread water vigorously, and ended up with a cash deficit of $46.7B, just a tad more red ink that 2011’s $45.6B.
 
Some thoughts on these results:
 
- The $46.7B annual cash deficit is the third in a row. The 2012 shortfall confirms it; SS will never see a cash flow surplus again. Every dollar of the cash shortfall MUST be funded by selling additional debt to the public.
   
I hope this is clear. I’ll repeat it. Social Security is adding to the debt held by the public. It is forcing the country to borrow more to fund current operations. When Senate Democrats, like Dick Durbin and Harry Reid say, “SS does not add a penny to our debt.”they are lying.
+++
 
- The Tax on Benefits is up to a meaningful $27.1b (+15%). The increase is the result of many newly retired folks who are getting SS, and also have other income (investments and pensions). This forces them to add the SS income into their tax base. THIS IS A “MEANS TEST”.
 
I emphasize this fact as there is very strong opposition to the concept of a means tax for SS by Democrats in Washington and the liberal press (Dean Baker). But it already exists!
 
Liberals don’t like means testing because it undermines the principals of SS. It makes it appear that SS is a form of welfare. The fear is that if SS is labeled as welfare, the popularity of the program would quickly wane. So the staunchest supporters of SS are avoiding a fix that could patch the finances for the worst reasons. They are supporting Roosevelt’s dreams, at the expense of the base they say they are trying to protect. Only in America….
 
The problem with the existing Tax on Benefits is that it does not cut deep enough to fill the bucket. I advocate that the tax bite for high-end seniors be increased. I will go further, and state that the means test for SS benefits should be based on assets, not just income that can be manipulated.
 
My strong feelings on means testing SS benefits are to my personal disadvantage; my SS benefits would be gone under my plan. I say this now, as I know there will be many who will throw rocks at me for my stance. I can already see the words, “I paid for it, the money is mine!” I say ,”Sorry, this will come sooner or later.”
 
My gripe is that the generation that is causing the problem, the Baby Boomers, is getting off scot-free. All of the proposals to tweak SS (Age and inflation adjustments) would phase in over twenty-years. With this, the bulk of the baby boomers would get a free ride. This doesn’t seem fair at all to me. Society, as a whole, will have to pay for the Boomers, but the Boomers should shoulder a higher percent of the cost. By no means should their political clout result in an unfair outcome. This is a political “Kick of the Can”, “screw folks sometime in the future”. A downright ugly plan at that.
   
+++
 
- In 2012 the Treasury paid SS $115B to offset the drop in income related to the 2% reduction in payroll taxes for the year. The operating results (including the Treasury contribution) still produced a cash flow deficit of $46.7B. In other words, the shortfall for 2012 added $162B to the borrowing requirements at Treasury. This borrowing resulted in a dollar-for-dollar increase in the Debt Owed to the Public.
 
+++
 
- There was an improvement (+6.5%) in the YoY payroll tax income. A portion of the better results are annual “Adjustments”. 2012 had positive adjustments to revenue from the prior year totaling $2.1B, while 2011 had negative adjustments of $8.6B. Taken together, the real rate of increase for revenues at SS is closer to 5.2%. This data can be used to create an estimate of total payroll income (Adjusted payroll income / Tax rate {12.4%} :
 
2011 estimated SS total payrolls = $5.658T
2012 estimated SS total payroll = $5.951T
YoY change = $293B (1.8%)
 
The ~$300B of increased pay seems like a very big number, but when you consider that inflation is running at about that same 1.8%, most folks are getting no place fast.
 
I draw this comparison to make a point about the huge numbers that are part of the economy. A $300B increase in worker’s incomes doesn’t move the needle at all. Amazing…
Note: This quickie numbers analysis does not reflect the cap of $106.5K on SS tax, nor other sources of income that is not taxed by SS. I don’t think this skews the results/conclusions by much. Social Security has 155m in its pool, significantly larger than the Non-Farms Payroll (135m). These numbers cover a big slice of the American pie.
 
+++
 
- The YoY increase in Benefits of $50.1B (6.9%) is a reflection of A) A COLA increase of 3.6% and B) A net increase of 1.4m in the number of beneficiaries. The costs at SS rose at a pace that is far higher than the economy grew in 2012. Approximately 11,000 people enter the system every day. 7,000 current members of the club, well, they leave the system 24/7.
 
+++
 
- Interest income is down 2.5% in 2012. The decrease of $1.1B is modest, but also significant. The passage of time and ZIRP/QE, has caught up with SS’s investment portfolio. The interest income at SS for 2011 will prove to be the zenith; from now on, the interest income at SS will be in annual decline. This is an important milestone, a decidedly negative one at that.
 
The Federal Reserve has cheapened the cost of money at the expense of SS. One can argue the merits of this tradeoff, but what can’t be argued, is the consequence to SS. If the Ten-Year were at 4% (Versus the 6% long-term average) it would add $700B to SS interest income over the next (critical) ten-years.
 
If you listen to Bernanke, the other Fed Doves, guys like the WSJ’s Jon Hilsenrath, and all of the economists on TV, you would think that there is no consequence to the government of perpetual cheap money. Actually, what Bernanke is doing is dramatically shortening the day of reckoning for SS. The current thinking is the SS “go bust” date is 2033. But when SS releases its annual report in May, it will confirm that the date has been brought forward a few years, and the culprit is cheap money. I wish that someone other than the blog world would point these things out. Bernanke is no pal of SS, Very Important People, like Paul Krugman, love SS and also hail Bernanke’s endless cheap money. I guess they don’t see the conflict.
 
+++ (finally, sorry for running on)
 
- There was no crisis at SS in 2012, and there won’t be a real crisis for a number of years to come. The growing annual cash deficits are now “programmed” to happen. This gives Democrats the opportunity to say, “Hands off SS”. “It ain’t broke, so don’t try to fix it”.
 
My guess is that the Democrats will prevail on SS with regard to the current fiscal cliff debate. As a result, there will be no changes to SS. Should that be the outcome, in about five years the wheels will fall off the cart. By then, SS will be running cash deficits of at least $200B a year. It will be much harder to “fix” than today.