Whew! The pandemic had a smaller impact on the Social
Security trust funds — that is, Social Security's solvency — than many feared
during the depths of the pandemic downturn.
According to the new 2021 annual report from the Social
Security Trustees, the depletion date for the combined trust funds —retirement
and disability — is 2033 without any changes to program benefits. That would be
when today's 54-year-olds reach Social Security's Full Retirement Age. Still,
that's one year earlier than last year's 2034 estimate.
Depletion date or insolvency doesn't mean bankruptcy — far
from it. Funding from payroll tax receipts will be enough to pay 78% of
promised benefits after the combined Social Security trust funds depletion date
is reached.
"The trust fund report should be seen as a
strength," says Eric Kingson, professor of social work and public
administration at Syracuse University and co-author with Nancy Altman of "Social
Security Works for Everyone: Protecting and Expanding the Insurance Americans
Love and Count On."
What the Social Security Trustees Said
The report, Kingson said, "provides information for
Congress and the public on what needs to be done to maintain benefits."
And Altman, president of Social Security Works, chair of the
Strengthen Social Security Coalition and a rumored possible Biden appointee to
run the Social Security Administration, said this when the Trustees report came
out on Wednesday: "Today's report shows that Social Security remains
strong and continues to work well, despite a once-in-a-century pandemic. That
this year's projections are so similar to last year's proves once again that
our Social Security system is built to withstand times of crisis, providing a
source of certainty in uncertain times."
But the Social Security Trustees are strikingly cautious
about their estimates involving the impact of the pandemic on the Social
Security trust fund and its sister trust fund for Medicare, the federal health
insurance program primarily for people 65 and older.
Despite the dry language of actuaries, the uncertainty is
apparent.
Employment, earnings, interest rates and gross domestic
product (GDP) dropped substantially in the second quarter of 2020, the worst
economic period of the pandemic. As a result, the decline in payroll-tax
receipts which pay for Social Security benefits eroded the trust funds, though
the drop in payroll taxs was offset somewhat by higher mortality rates.
"Given the unprecedented level of uncertainty, the
Trustees currently assume that the pandemic will have no net effect on the
individual long range ultimate assumptions," they write.
The Pandemic and Social Security Solvency
But, they add, "At this time, there is no consensus on
what the lasting effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on the long-term experience
might be, if any."
The Trustees say they "will continue to monitor
developments and modify the projections in later reports."
Translation: the status quo remains and the forecast for the
pandemic's effect on Social Security's solvency is cloudy.
Odds are the coming Social Security financing shortfall
won't get sustained attention from either the Biden administration or Congress
despite the need to take action before 2034.
The Trustees aren't too happy about that.
Their report says: "The Trustees recommend that
lawmakers address the projected trust fund shortfalls in a timely way in order
to phase in necessary changes gradually and give workers and beneficiaries time
to adjust to them. Implementing changes sooner rather than later would allow
more generations to share in the needed revenue increases or reductions in
scheduled benefits… With informed discussion, creative thinking, and timely
legislative action, Social Security can continue to protect future
generations."
The Political Outlook for Social Security Reforms
But the Biden administration and its Congressional allies
are instead focused on threading the political needle for an ambitious $3.5
trillion infrastructure spending package, while also dealing with the fallout
from the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Leading Republican legislators have called for so-called
entitlement reform (think Social Security benefit cuts), but that's a tough
sell in the current Democratically controlled Congress.
"Does the report mean the timetable argues for real
concrete action on [addressing solvency issues of] Social Security? Probably
not. Will it revive the rhetoric that the sky is falling? Sure," says
Robert Blancato, national coordinator of the Elder Justice Coalition advocacy
group, president of Matz Blancato and Associates and a 2016 Next Avenue Influencer
in Aging.
The issue over how best to restore financial solvency to
Social Security isn't going away. That's because the program is fundamental to
the economic security of retired Americans. Social Security currently pays
benefits to 49 million retired workers and dependents of retired workers (as
well as survivor benefits to six million younger people and 10 million disabled
people).
However, the tenor of the longer-term solvency discussion
has significantly changed in recent years.
To be sure, a number of leading Republicans still want to
cut Social Security retirement benefits to reduce the impending shortfall.
Their latest maneuver is what's known as The TRUST Act, sponsored by Utah Sen.
Mitt Romney.
It calls for closed-door meetings of congressionally appointed
bipartisan committees to come up with legislation to restore solvency by June 1
of the following year. The TRUST act would also limit Congress to voting yes or
no on the proposals. No amendments allowed.
What's Different About Future Social Security Changes
AARP, responding to the Trustees report news, came out
vehemently against The TRUST Act's closed-door reform plan. "All members
of Congress should be held accountable for any action on Social Security and
Medicare," AARP CEO Jo Ann Jenkins said.
"The concern seems to be they would look to cuts first,
versus a more comprehensive approach," says Blancato. A more comprehensive
approach could include tax increases for the wealthy and technical changes to
the Social Security system.
Something else that's different is that liberals are no
longer trying to simply stave off benefit cuts and preserve the program exactly
as it is — the main tactic since Republican Newt Gingrich was House Majority
Leader in the mid-1990s. That have bigger and bolder ideas.
Most Democratic members of Congress have co-sponsored
legislation to expand Social Security or voted in support of incremental
increases in benefits, such as providing more for the oldest old and a new
minimum Social Security benefit equal to at least 125% of the poverty level
(that translates to $16,100 for a household of one).
Addressing Social Security's shortfall and paying for the
new benefits, with the Democrats' plans, would come from tax hikes, ranging from
gradually raising the 6.2% payroll tax rate to hiking or eliminating the
$142,800 limit on annual earnings subject to Social Security taxes to some
combination of these.
But Social Security benefit cuts are off the negotiating
table for the Democrats.
"Biden has made a commitment not to cut and to make
modest improvements in benefits," says Kingson. "He won't back off
that."
The President has pushed for raising the Social Security
payroll tax cap so people earning incomes over $400,000 would owe taxes on that
money, too. He has also backed raising the minimum Social Security benefit to
125% of the poverty level.
The Good News for Social Security Beneficiaries
One more piece of Social Security news to keep in mind:
Social Security recipients are likely to get a sizable cost-of-living
adjustment (COLA) to their benefits in 2022. The exact amount will be announced
in October and estimates vary widely, from 3% to as high as 6%. A 6% increase
would be the highest in 40 years.
But there's a catch: Medicare Part B premiums for physician
and outpatient services — a significant portion of Medicare's funding —will
also go up due to inflation. And those premium payments usually come right out
of monthly Social Security checks.
The Trustees report says the estimated standard monthly
Medicare Part B premium in 2022 will be $158.50, up about 7% from $148.50 in
2021 and a 9.6% total increase since 2020. (Monthly premiums are based on
income, though, and can exceed $500 for high earners.)
The Trustees report says Medicare's Hospital Insurance Trust
Fund (HITF) has enough funds to pay scheduled benefits until 2026, unchanged
from last year. Medicare's finances stayed stable during the pandemic, with
people over 65 largely avoiding elective care. The pandemic "is not expected
to have a large effect on the financial status of the [Medicare] trust funds
after 2024," the Trustees report noted.
Like Social Security, the trust fund behind Medicare Part A
(which pays for hospitals, nursing facilities, home health and hospice care) is
primarily funded by payroll taxes. There will be enough tax income coming in to
cover an estimated 91% of total scheduled benefits once the trust fund is
insolvent.
Medicare Part D, which covers prescription drugs, is mostly
funded by federal income taxes, premiums and state payments.
But the political story about Medicare is less about its
projected 2026 shortfall and more about momentum toward expanding the program.
The Biden administration has proposed adding hearing, visual and dental care to
Medicare benefits, something also being pushed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)
At this time, it's unclear how those new benefits would be paid for, though
they wouldn't affect the trust fund.
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