NP Rank:
Congress and the President need a math class
They keep messing around with Social Security and instead of fixing the cash flow problem, they are making it worse. Why? Are they incompetent? Is it politically expedient to do something that feels good now and will come home to roost when they are long gone?
The younger end of the voter spectrum had better awaken and take charge of their government. Incumbents are too old and incompetent to govern, maybe.
“Payroll tax cut raises worries about Social Security’s future funding
By Jia Lynn Yang, Published: December 29
By extending the payroll tax cut, Congress and the administration have quietly made a critical change in how Social Security is funded — one that some in Washington worry could undermine the program’s foundation if lawmakers keep renewing the tax break.
For the first time in the program’s history, tens of billions of dollars from the government’s general pool of revenue are being funneled to the Social Security trust fund to make up for the revenue lost to the tax cut. Roughly $110 billion will be automatically shifted from the Treasury to the trust fund to cover this year’s cut, according to the Social Security Board of Trustees. An additional $19 billion, it is estimated, will be necessary to pay for the two-month extension.
The tax cut is supposed to be temporary. But as squabbles over this issue and the Bush tax cuts have revealed, short-term tax cuts in Washington have a way of sticking around longer than planned, especially as economic growth remains slow and lawmakers are wary of raising anyone’s tax bill.
The prospect of policymakers continually turning to the payroll tax as a way of providing economic stimulus troubles experts, some lawmakers and both public trustees of the Social Security trust fund. Their concern: that Social Security will lose its status as a protected benefit owed to every working American and instead become politically vulnerable, just like any other government program.
And as this year’s debate about the nation’s debt showed, nothing is off limits to the political brinkmanship that has come to dominate Washington.
“It’s a grave step for Social Security,” saidCharles Blahous, one of two public trustees for Social Security and a research fellow with the Hoover Institution. “It just seems to me the program both financially and politically will be on a lot rockier footing.”
Robert Reischauer, the other public trustee and president of the Urban Institute, said extending the payroll tax cut another year during high unemployment seems justified. But it “could, if it continues for a substantial period of time, undermine one of the foundational arguments that makes the Social Security program inviolate.”
Since its inception under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Social Security program has been premised on a simple contract: Americans pay into the program’s trust fund over years of paychecks through the payroll tax. In return, when they retire, they receive monthly benefits.
The payroll tax cut changes that. Instead being a protected program with its own stream of funding, Social Security, by takingmoney from general revenue, becomes more akin to other government initiatives such as Pentagon spending or clean-air regulation — programs that rely on income taxes and political jockeying for support.
“All of a sudden Social Security will have to compete with every other program, whereas before it had its own dedicated revenue,” said Nancy Altman, co-director of Social Security Works, an advocacy group. “It’s breaking the kind of firewall that has always existed between the trust fund and the operating fund.””





Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (4)
at 05:24 on December 30th, 2011
They just need replacing. Remember in November.
at 14:29 on December 30th, 2011
The money isn't being funneled to the Social Security Trust fund because of the pay-roll tax reductions. That is more of Obama's B.S. It is being partially returned, and damn little of it, after being taken to pay for other Obama government projects and having been replaced by Geithner's Treasury IOU's. It is these IOU's of Obama's administration that are being repaid to a fund that was to hold $2.6 trillion and secure SS through 2042. The $110 billion transfer is a drop in the trillion bucket. It doesn't even cover the lost interest on the money as Obama emptied the trust.
This is more of the Obama regimes accounting scheme's and playing the fear game to cover up their gross mismanagement and spending policies while blaming the Republicans for what Obama has done to pay off his election debts and secure his costly social programs. It is the very same as Obama taking the Government Workers Pension Fund and dispersing that to pay off his spending so he can falsely claim he hasn't raised the cost of spending more and more. That is until some government tomorrow must pay off those Treasury IOU's too. Like with EU style austerity programs to repay it all to keep the government solvent.
It is no different than this false blaming of Republicans for fighting a two month pay-roll relief extension when Republicans have been fighting all along for a full year extension that will actually accomplish a positive working tax relief for small and medium business. Not this Obama piecemeal policy game play of continually coming back and reliving issues that do nothing but, keep Obama in the papers as The Peoples Robin Hood attacking Congress for not passing his empty polices that have no real and functioning value when placed over a so tiny time margin. Remember it is you who wants four more years of the same at any cost and damn those coming behind you. Remember that.
at 14:44 on December 30th, 2011
What is the motivation of Democrats or Republicans to screw the electorate?
at 15:41 on December 30th, 2011
If you are going to reply with a question. Here is a better one. Where have all the Democrats gone? Haven't heard from one since Obama's election. All we hear from is the progs who declare Obama is going to bring down the system and make the rich poor and the poor wealthy. That under Obama the government is finally going to take care of us. Unfortunately, on policy the Democrat is silent. The progs are loud and vociferous. The Democrats, if any remain beyond the DINO's, are silent and are certainly not challenging Obama's spending and the phoney class war propaganda of making the rich pay for his faux social pogroms. Not unless you think stealing from the Social Security Trust and the Government Workers Pension Fund is making the rich pay. There is no vigorous debate among Democrats in Congress for what are sloppy and cheap games of pass the buck, kick the can further down the road, and rob Peter to pay Paul accounting practices of this administration. Well, until the individual DINO comes up for election and then the distancing starts and the cries of " Not me" are shouted to the furthest reaches of the State. Where have all the Democrats gone? Gone to their political graves like the proverbial flowers of the Pete Seeger lyrics?