What Happens After Social Security’s Trust Fund Runs Out? – OpEd [Eurasia Review]
Earlier this year,
When that happens, they say that every American who receives retirement or disability benefits will see them reduced by 20%. The program will still be able to pay out 80% of its benefits using what it collects through its payroll taxes.
That will happen because the program has been running in the red. Since 2009, the program has paid out more benefits than it takes in through payroll taxes. It has taken money out of its
But in 2034, that will come to an end because the trust funds will be depleted. Here's the Trustee's 2023 report chart that shows that happening. I've colored in when the program was either running a surplus (green) or a deficit (red):
The
The payable-benefits scenario would reduce budget deficits and debt significantly. Under that scenario, the abrupt and large reduction in benefits in 2034 would have both short-term effects and long-term effects on the economy. For instance, in the short term, the reduction in benefits would cause GDP to decline, though in the long term the effects of the reduction in benefits on people's behavior and other aspects of the economy would cause GDP to rise. Those changes would affect different groups of people to varying degrees.
Here's the effect they predict for the
In 2053, the primary deficit under the payable-benefits scenario would be smaller than it is in CBO's extended baseline projections--0.9 percent of GDP instead of 3.3 percent of GDP. Adding interest costs raises the total deficit in 2053 to 5.4 percent of GDP under the payable-benefits scenario, compared with 10.0 percent of GDP in the extended baseline projections. For the payable-benefits scenario, debt held by the public would be 132 percent of GDP in 2053, CBO projects, rather than 181 percent.
The CBO sees the scenario of letting
For the economy, they have a more mixed outlook depending on whether you take a short- or long-term perspective:
In the short term, the significant and abrupt decline in
In the long run, though, output would be higher than it is in the extended baseline, mainly as a result of three factors. First, the supply of labor would expand. Second, private investment would increase following a rise in private savings as some workers chose to save more while working to offset the effect of smaller benefits on their income and spending in retirement. Third, the amount of funds available for private investment would grow, owing to smaller budget deficits and an associated reduction in borrowing by the federal government, which would reduce interest rates and boost output.
All this assumes politicians do nothing to try to restore
This article was published by The Beacon
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