Thursday, April 26, 2012

Modest changes won’t solve Social Security

“In 2011, the Old-Age and Survivors Trust Fund, which pays for retirement and survivors’ benefits, took in $698.8 billion, which includes $106.5 billion that came from a paper transaction that credited interest to the trust fund. Excluding the interest, the retirement and survivors program had income of $592.3 billion but paid out $603.8 billion in benefits, leaving a deficit for 2011 of $11.5 billion. Additional deficits were suffered by Social Security’s disability program.

Counting both programs together, in 2011, Social Security spent $45 billion more in benefits than it took in from its payroll tax. This deficit is in addition to a $49 billion gap in 2010 and an expected average annual gap of about $66 billion between 2012 and 2018. These deficits will quickly balloon to alarming proportions. After adjusting for inflation, annual deficits will reach $95 billion in 2020 and $318.7 billion in 2030 before the trust fund runs out in 2033. Now is the time to focus on solutions.”

http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2012/04/social-security-finances-significantly-worse-says-2012-trustees-report

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Murray sez:
Hmmmm? Duh... Do you think just maybe it would help to restore the 2% payroll tax deduction? Another one of my wild and crazy thoughts. I have more if anyone is interested!