In recent months, a few commentators have sounded an alarm about the recession’s impact on Social Security’s near-term prospects, which may lead some people to think that the program faces financial problems in the next several years. Fortunately, that is not the case. Social Security continues to run annual surpluses and remains capable of paying scheduled benefits in full for nearly three decades.
The deep recession has indisputably affected the Social Security system’s finances, as is visible in the latest projections by the Social Security trustees and by the independent Congressional Budget Office. But both organizations estimate that, under current trends, the program can continue to pay full benefits from the trust funds until 2037. Thus, Social Security faces no immediate threat.
Nevertheless, Congress and the Administration should act sooner rather than later to restore Social Security’s long-run solvency. Prompt action would allow changes to be phased in gradually and afford people ample time to adjust their financial plans.
Despite some media reports[1] that Social Security is “running in the red” and will need a “bailout” soon, the numbers say otherwise:
- In 2009, the combined Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance Trust Funds — commonly known as Social Security — ran a surplus of $137 billion, meaning that the trust funds’ income (from taxes and interest) exceeded their spending (for benefits and administration) by that amount.
- The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) expects the surplus to slip to about $83 billion in 2010 before rising again — reaching almost $150 billion in mid-decade, then declining. (See Figure 1.)
- The latest estimates by the Social Security trustees and by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) generally echo CBO’s projections.
Most analyses of Social Security’s finances — including this one — focus on the combined Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) and Disability Insurance (DI) trust funds. Technically, these two trust funds are separate, and the Disability Insurance trust fund faces exhaustion in the next decade. Last March, CBO projected that the DI trust fund would face depletion in 2018; the latest Social Security trustees’ report agrees.
It is expected, however, that lawmakers will act before then to reallocate some payroll tax revenue between the two Social Security trust funds, as they often have done in the past. That would enable the combined trust funds to last for nearly three decades. Congressional action will be needed to extend the combined funds beyond that and restore long-term solvency to the program.
Not surprisingly, the economic downturn has shrunk the Social Security surplus. Recessions take a toll on the entire federal budget, and Social Security is no exception. Payroll taxes are very sensitive to macroeconomic conditions in the short run, while Social Security benefits are less so. [2] The Social Security surplus also slumped during the recessions of 1981-1982, 1990-1991, and 2001. The recession that began in December 2007, the deepest since the Depression, has weakened the
TABLE 1: The Outlook for Social Security (by fiscal year, in billions of dollars) |
| 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 |
Annual surplus | 137 | 83 | 91 | 101 | 114 | 131 | 143 | 148 | 148 | 149 | 143 | 132 |
Surplus excluding interest | 19 | -36 | -26 | -13 | -2 | 10 | 13 | 8 | -4 | -14 | -32 | -55 |
Holdings | 2,504 | 2,587 | 2,677 | 2,779 | 2,893 | 3,024 | 3,167 | 3,315 | 3,463 | 3,612 | 3,755 | 3,886 |
Source: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities based on Congressional Budget Office, August 2010 baseline projections. CBO has not published complete details for its August baseline; CBPP calculated the Social Security surplus as the difference between the total off-budget surplus — as published by CBO — and the off-budget Postal Service deficit, assuming that the latter figure did not change since CBO’s March 2010 projection. |
Social Security outlook more than those previous downturns, but it has not erased the trust funds’ surplus or endangered the program’s ability to pay currently promised benefits in the near term.
The trust funds’ condition thus differs sharply from the situation in early 1983 — another period that followed a deep recession. Then, not only did the program run deficits, but the funds’ balance skated dangerously close to zero, and benefits were imperiled until Congress stepped in with a rescue package.[3] In contrast, today the funds are running annual surpluses and own over $2.5 trillion worth of securities.
Why, then, do some commentators say the surplus has vanished? Because they employ a narrow measure — comparing annual Social Security expenditures with annual Social Security revenues, excluding the interest payments the Social Security trust funds earn. That measure omits an important component of the trust funds’ income.
Since the mid-1980s, the Social Security trust funds have steadily collected more in payroll taxes and other income than they have needed to pay benefits and administrative costs. They have used that excess to purchase Treasury bonds — over $2.5 trillion worth at the end of fiscal 2009, bearing an average interest rate of 4.7 percent. CBO expects the funds to earn $120 billion in interest income in 2010.
Excluding interest, the Social Security surplus is indeed negative in 2010 through 2013 in CBO’s latest projections. Put another way, in those years Social Security will pay out more in benefits than it will collect in payroll and income taxes.
That matters to the Treasury; when Social Security generates less extra cash, the government has to tap the credit markets to borrow more. The slump in payroll-tax revenues is just one symptom of the severe economic downturn; from 2008 to 2009, for example, Social Security revenues fell by 1 percent, while all other revenues fell by a stunning 22 percent.[4] Investors accept that today’s large deficits result partly from cyclical factors, and — so far — have willingly lent to the Treasury at historically low interest rates. Economic recovery will bolster the overall budget including Social Security. Late in the decade, however, the Social Security surplus will deteriorate again, as demographic pressures accelerate with the retirement of the baby boomers.
From Social Security’s standpoint, the trust funds will continue to grow as long as there is a surplus from the program’s tax revenues and interest income combined. In brief, commentators who focus on Social Security’s cash flow excluding interest are describing the program’s impact on the Treasury’s need to raise cash in the private credit markets. That is an important issue, but it has little significance for Social Security’s ability to pay benefits in the years ahead.
The Social Security Board of Trustees released its annual report on August 5.[5] The Social Security actuaries and CBO do their projections independently; they often differ in detail but generally tell a similar story. The trustees’ projections extend for 75 years to help put short-term fluctuations (like the current recession) into perspective.
Three key dates often receive attention. In this year’s report, those are:
- The date when annual Social Security costs begin to exceed the program’s tax income, not counting its interest income. Like CBO, the trustees expect a few years of so-called negative cash flow — in the trustees’ case, in 2010 and 2011— followed by several positive years as economic recovery takes hold. Like CBO, the trustees forecast that this cash-flow measure will turn negative permanently later in the decade as the retirement of the baby boom generation accelerates.
- The date when Social Security’s annual costs begin to exceed its total income, including interest. When that happens, Social Security will continue to pay full benefits, but will do so by drawing on trust fund assets (that is, by redeeming the Treasury bonds that the trust funds hold). The trustees expect that to happen in 2025.
- The date when the trust funds will be depleted and the program thus can no longer pay full benefits. The trustees expect that to occur in 2037, as does CBO.[6] After that date, if policymakers took no other action to shore up the program, benefits would have to be trimmed by about one-fourth.[7]
It is important to remember that neither the first nor the second “key date” has any programmatic significance, although they help to illuminate Social Security’s effect on the overall budget.
The fact that Social Security can pay full benefits for nearly another three decades does not mean that policymakers should wait that long to address program solvency. To the contrary, they would do far better to address the challenge sooner rather than later, by carefully crafting a package that spreads sacrifices fairly across generations and income groups and allows those affected ample notice so that they can adjust their financial plans accordingly.
Social Security’s imbalance is manageable in size and poses a far less thorny challenge than the relentless growth in health-care costs. [8] And the possible solutions are well known. Various organizations have laid out options for fixing the Social Security system with tax increases, benefit reductions, or some blend of both.[9] Some also urge carefully targeted benefit enhancements to improve the system’s adequacy for vulnerable recipients. Although there is no imminent crisis in Social Security, tackling the problem soon could enable a fair, balanced solution while assuring creditors that the United States is getting its fiscal house in order.