Gordon Gray, Tara O'Neill Hayes, Andrew Strohman
April 22, 2020
Executive Summary
Today, the Social Security and Medicare Trustees
issued their annual reports detailing the financial state of America’s two
largest entitlement programs. The reports echo past conclusions: Social
Security and Medicare are still going bankrupt.
At its current pace, Medicare will go bankrupt
in 2026 (the same as last year’s projection) and the Social
Security Trust Funds for old-aged benefits and disability benefits will become
exhausted by 2035.
A quick look at the data proves just how broken
our current entitlement programs are. An American Action Forum analysis of the
data found other startling statistics, including:
·
Medicare’s Annual Cash
Shortfall in 2019 was $396 billion;
·
Payroll taxes would have
to increase more than 15 percent to pay for Medicare Part A in 2019; and
·
Over the next 75 years,
Social Security will owe $16.8 trillion more than it is projected to take in.
What You Need to Know About the Medicare and
Social Security Trustees Reports includes one-pagers and relevant statistics on:
·
The solvency of
Medicare;
·
The president’s
stewardship of Medicare;
·
The solvency of the
Social Security Trust Fund;
·
The solvency of the
Social Security Disability Insurance (DI) program; and
·
The solvency of the
Social Security Old-age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) program.
THE SOLVENCY OF MEDICARE
This week, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin
released the 2020 Medicare Trustees Report. This annual report delivered yet
another reminder to the American public that Medicare is undeniably going
bankrupt.
The report estimates that the Medicare Hospital
Insurance Trust Fund will be bankrupt by 2026. While the bankruptcy projection may snag the
headlines, there are three key budgetary numbers that shouldn’t go unnoticed.
$396 Billion
|
Medicare’s Annual Cash Shortfall in 2019
· In 2019, Medicare spent $796.2 billion on medical
services for America’s seniors but only collected $400.3 billion in
payroll taxes and monthly premiums.· This cash shortfall represented 40
percent of the federal deficit in 2019.
|
$5.5 Trillion
|
Medicare’s Cumulative Cash Shortfall Since 1965
· Medicare has had a cash shortfall every year since its
creation except two: 1966 and 1974.
· Medicare covers these cash shortfalls by “borrowing”
unrelated tax revenues from other programs.
|
34 Percent
|
Medicare’s True Contribution to the National Debt
· America’s fiscal trajectory is unsustainable, and
Medicare is the primary source of red ink.
· Medicare’s cash shortfall is responsible for one-third
of the federal debt.
|
Continuing with the Medicare status quo is
unacceptable. Balancing Medicare’s annual cash shortfalls under the
existing system would prove devastating to seniors and requires the following
reforms.
15 Percent Increase
|
Annual Payroll-Tax Increase Needed to Balance Medicare
Part A
· In 2019, the Medicare Part A (hospitals) cash deficit
was $43.2 billion.
· To balance, payroll taxes would need to increase from
1.45 percent to 1.7 percent.
|
$4,431 Increase
|
Annual Premium Increase Needed to Balance Medicare Part B
· In 2019, the Medicare Part B (physicians) cash deficit
was $271 billion.
· To balance, seniors’ premiums for physicians would need
to increase by 273 percent, meaning the typical annual physician premium cost
to seniors would rise from $1,626 to $6,057 – an increase of $4,431.
|
$2,062 Increase
|
Annual Premium Increase Needed to Balance Medicare Part D
· In 2019, the Part D (prescription drugs) cash deficit
was $82 billion.
· To balance, seniors’ premiums for prescription drugs
would need to increase by 518 percent, meaning the annual drug premium cost
to seniors would rise from $398 to $2,460 – an increase of $2,062.
|
THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH’S STEWARDSHIP OF
MEDICARE
An Evaluation of the Executive Branch’s Medicare
Stewardship
Each year, the Trustees Report provides a
non-partisan evaluation of the president’s stewardship of Medicare. Prepared
annually for Congress by the Office of the Chief Actuary, the Trustees Report
offers unparalleled detail on the financial operations and actuarial status of
the Medicare program. In short, it’s where every administration’s soaring
Medicare rhetoric meets fiscal reality. So far, President Trump has resisted
undertaking significant Medicare reform. The 2020 Trustees Report provides a
sense of what the future may look like should Medicare continue to remain
unchanged, and why sooner or later Medicare reform is inevitable.
MEDICARE FINANCIAL OPERATIONS (Billions)
*2020 Projections
The Obama Administration oversaw a $2.4 trillion
cash shortfall over 8 years (2009-2016). The fiscal reality is that continuing
the previous administration’s Medicare policies and leaving Medicare unchanged
all but guarantees bankruptcy. The Trustees project that by the end of 2020,
the Trump Administration will have overseen its own $1.5 trillion Medicare cash
shortfall during this presidential term.
With such unprecedented levels of cash
shortfalls continuing through the budget horizon, maintaining the status quo
ensures that Medicare will soon not exist for today’s seniors, let alone future
generations of Americans. These rising costs and the measures necessary to
cover them will increasingly harm seniors if Medicare reform is not undertaken.
Medicare and Medicaid Will Cost $2 Trillion by 2025
|
Medicare Costs Will Continue to Rise
· At the current pace, the Medicare and Medicaid programs continue to be on
track to surpass an annual cost of $2 trillion in 4 years (more information here).
· This budget shortfall is expected to continue even with
Medicare premiums and deductibles rising every year (more information here).
|
This week, the board of trustees that oversees
the Social Security program released its annual report. The report shows that
the nation’s primary safety net for retirees, survivors, and the disabled
remains in financial distress and proves that, absent reform, the program will
fail to meet its promises to future seniors.
The report estimates that the combined
(retirement and disability) Social Security Trust Funds will be bankrupt by
2035. The Trustees Report
provides additional metrics that make clear the program’s structural
imbalances. It is important to note that these figures predate the COVID-19
pandemic and the federal response thereto, including payroll tax deferrals and
credits. General fund transfers have been authorized to mitigate the effects on
the OASDI Trust Funds.
$78.3 Billion
|
Social Security’s Contribution to the Debt in 2019
· In 2019, Social Security spent $1,059.3 billion but only
collected $981 billion in non-interest income.
· This year is the 10th in a row that Social Security has
been in cash deficit, with the program running a cumulative deficit of $615.6
billion since 2010.
|
$16.8 Trillion
|
Social Security’s Unfunded 75-Year Liability
· Social Security’s promised benefits exceed projected
payroll taxes and Trust Fund redemptions by $16.8 trillion – $3 trillion
higher than was estimated last year.
· Social Security faces an imbalance as a share of taxable
payroll of 3.21 percent – the worst imbalance in modern history.
|
15 Years
|
Years Until the Trust Funds Are Exhausted
· The Trust Funds will be exhausted in 15 years, running
out during the same year as projected in last year’s estimate.
· This horizon to exhaustion is the shortest since 1982.
|
The Trustees Report paints a distressed picture
of Social Security’s financial health and demonstrates that the present course
is unsustainable. Social Security is now contributing to the annual deficit,
while promised benefits vastly exceed planned funding. The implications of
failing to reform the status quo are:
21 Percent
|
Reduction in Benefits in 2035
· After the projected exhaustion of the Social Security
Trust Funds, Social Security revenue will fund only 79 percent of promised
benefits.
· This portion deteriorates further, to 73 percent, by
2094.
|
25 Percent
|
Payroll Tax Increase
· Absent reform, to meet promised benefits over the long
term, payroll taxes would have to be increased immediately by 25 percent,
from a rate of 12.4 percent to 15.54 percent.
|
THE SOLVENCY OF SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
INSURANCE
This week, the board of trustees that oversees
the Social Security program released its annual report. The report provides
encouraging news about the outlook for the Disability Insurance (DI) program.
The report estimates that the DI Trust Fund will
be exhausted in 2064. This
outlook is an improvement over last year’s report, which projected Trust Fund
exhaustion in 2052, and reflects continued declining applications and benefit
awards. Nevertheless, the program has faced recent solvency challenges,
requiring a payroll tax reallocation in 2015.
$153.1 Billion
|
DI’s 10-Year Contribution to the Debt
· In 2019, DI spending was cash-flow negative for the
first time since 2015 and has added $153.1 billion to the debt since 2010.
· Recent improvements in the program’s cash position,
however, largely reflects a higher allocation of payroll revenues, reducing
payroll revenues by an equal amount paid into the Old-age and Survivors
Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund.
|
$278 Billion
|
DI’s Unfunded 75-Year Liability
· Social Security’s promised disability benefits exceed
projected payroll taxes and Trust Fund redemptions by over $278 billion,
which nevertheless reflects a continued remarkable improvement over past
recent estimates.
|
44 Years
|
Years Until the DI Trust Fund Is Exhausted
· The DI Trust Fund’s exhaustion date has substantially
improved over last year’s estimate – driven by lower expected applications
and benefit awards.
|
14.1 Million
|
Number of Beneficiaries in 2064
· Over 14 million Americans are projected to receive DI
benefits in 2064.
· This figure is comprised of over 11 million disabled
workers and more than 2 million spouses and children receiving auxiliary
benefits.
|
The Trustees Report provides continued good news
for America’s safety net for disabled workers, projecting a continued
improvement in the program’s financial outlook.
SOLVENCY OF SOCIAL SECURITY OLD-AGE AND
SURVIVORS INSURANCE
This week, the board of trustees that oversees
the Social Security program released their annual report. The report shows that
the Old-age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) program remains unsustainable and
will be unable to meet the needs of future beneficiaries, absent reform.
The report estimates that the OASI Trust Funds
will be exhausted by 2034. The report also makes clear several additional structural
challenges that endanger the millions of current and future retirees and
survivors who rely on this program.
$71.4 Billion
|
OASI’s Contribution to the Debt in 2019
· In 2019, OASI spent $911.4 billion but only collected
$840.0 billion in non-interest income.
· This is the 10th year in a row that OASI has been in
cash deficit, with the program having added $463.0 billion to the debt since
2010.
|
$16.5 Trillion
|
OASI’s Unfunded 75-Year Liability
· Social Security’s promised retirement and survivor
benefits exceed projected payroll taxes and Trust Fund redemptions by over
$16.5 trillion – an increase of over $3 trillion from last year’s report.
|
14 Years
|
Years Until the OASI Trust Fund Is Exhausted
· This is the shortest horizon until Trust Fund exhaustion
since 1982.
· The Trust Fund’s exhaustion date is unchanged from last
year’s estimate.
|
73 Million
|
Number of Beneficiaries in 2034 (Trust Fund Exhaustion
Year)
· Nearly 73 million Americans are projected to receive
OASI benefits in the year the Trust Fund is projected to become exhausted.
· This figure is comprised of 65 million retirees and
nearly 5.5 million survivors.
|
The Trustees Report makes clear that the primary
federal retirement program is facing its worst financial outlook since the
program was last overhauled. On its present course, the program is on track
either to slash the benefits of nearly 73 million Americans, or to raise taxes
significantly on future workers.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/research/the-future-of-americas-entitlements-what-you-need-to-know-about-the-medicare-and-social-security-trustees-reports-3/#ixzz6KRXQXYZW
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