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Paul Krugman Says Social Security Is Sustainable. It's Really Not.
Reason ^ | 2.23.2023 | Eric Boehm

Posted on 02/24/2023 2:36:49 PM PST by nickcarraway

Krugman sees benefit cuts as "a choice" but believes that implementing a massive tax increase on American employers and workers would be "of course" no big deal.

For The New York Times' Paul Krugman, the real crisis facing America's entitlement programs is that the media isn't working hard enough to ignore their impending collapse.

"I've seen numerous declarations from mainstream media that of course Medicare and Social Security can't be sustained in their present form," Krugman wrote in a Times op-ed this week. "And not just in the opinion pages."

Perhaps that's because the unsustainable trajectories of Social Security and Medicare aren't a matter of opinion. They're factual realities, supported by the most recent annual reports of the programs' trustees and the independent analysis of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Social Security's main trust fund will hit insolvency somewhere between 2033 and 2035, according to those projections, while one of the main trust funds in Medicare will be insolvent before the end of this decade. When insolvency hits, there will be mandatory across-the-board benefit cuts—for Social Security, that's likely to translate into a roughly 20 percent reduction in promised benefits.

Nevertheless, Krugman says he's got a solution that "need not involve benefit cuts."

His argument boils down to three points. First, Krugman says the CBO's projections about future costs in Social Security and Medicare might be wrong. Second, he speculates that they might be wrong because life expectancy won't continue to increase. Finally, if those first two things turn out to be at least partially true, then it's possible that cost growth will be limited to only about 3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) over the next three decades and we'll just raise taxes to cover that.

"America has the lowest taxes of any advanced nation; given the political will, of course we could come up with 3 percent more of G.D.P. in revenue," he writes. "We can keep these programs, which are so deeply embedded in American society, if we want to. Killing them would be a choice."

It's notable that Krugman sees benefit cuts as "a choice" but believes that implementing a massive tax increase on American employers and workers would be "of course" no big deal.

But that hardly addresses the substance of what he gets wrong. Let's take each of his three arguments in order and show why they're incorrect.

First, he says the CBO's projections about future costs for the two programs might be inaccurate because the agency is assuming that health care costs will continue to grow faster than the economy as a whole. At best, that means postponing insolvency by a few years. The structural imbalance between revenues and outlays means that depletion of the trust funds is a question of "when" and not "if," as this chart from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget makes clear.

Source: Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (https://www.crfb.org/blogs/cbo-only-decade-until-social-security-insolvency) Krugman even concedes that despite a decline in the expected rate of growth in future health care costs, those costs are still expected to rise faster than the economy grows. Combined with the aging of America's population, this is a demographic and fiscal time bomb. Ignoring that reality is certainly not a sound policy strategy.

Second, he speculates that mortality rates might continue to drop. While that might be good news from an actuarial perspective, it seems both morally horrifying and incredibly risky to base a long-term entitlement program on the assumption that more people will die at a younger age.

In fact, Krugman gets this point exactly backward. Instead of banking on a decline in life expectancy, Congress ought to raise the eligibility age for collecting benefits from Social Security and Medicare. That would create the same demographic benefits on the accounting side even as people live hopefully longer, better lives.

Krugman would no doubt see such a change as an unacceptable benefit cut, but in reality it would restore Social Security to its proper role as a safety net for the truly needy, not a conveyer belt to transfer wealth from the younger, working population to the older, relatively wealthier retired population. When Social Security launched in 1935, the average life expectancy for Americans was 61. That's changed, so the program's parameters should too.

Finally, the blitheness of Krugman's actual solution—a massive tax increase—ignores all the knock-on effects of that idea. Keeping Social Security and Medicare whole will require a tax increase in excess of $1 trillion, which would have massive repercussions on wages, the costs of starting a business, and economic growth in general. It's far from an ideal solution.

In all, Krugman's column amounts to an argument that his addiction to donuts is totally sustainable as long as someone else agrees to keep buying donuts for him (and as long as he ignores the long-term costs to his health). Maybe the doctors are wrong about the projected consequences of eating too many donuts. Maybe it will turn out that living longer just isn't all that great anyway. But if all else fails, at least he's got someone else willing to pay for his habit—and making any changes would be tantamount to killing a tradition deeply embedded in the Krugman morning routine. We must take that option off the breakfast table.

Instead of lying to their readers and constituents, America's thought and political leaders (not just President Joe Biden and Krugman but lawmakers and media commentators on all sides) should start acknowledging that America's entitlement programs are not sustainable in their current form.

Without changes, they will wreck the economy or force many retirees to deal with sudden cuts to benefits they expected to receive. Maybe both. Waiting to deal with this problem will only make it worse. If Krugman's column is the best argument for the long-term sustainability of America's two major entitlement programs, it should only underline how seriously screwed they are.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: paulkrugman; socialsecurity; taxes
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To: nickcarraway
When insolvency hits, there will be mandatory across-the-board benefit cuts—for Social Security, that's likely to translate into a roughly 20 percent reduction in promised benefits.

How does the 20% reduction in promised benefits fit into the analyses of whether to take the benefits as soon as possible (age 62) rather than wait until 65, etc? The reason most people (myself included) elect to take the money and run rather than wait is the uncertainty of what will be left when the time comes. Let’s face it folks you never know with government programs.

21 posted on 02/24/2023 3:25:01 PM PST by immadashell (Save Innocent Lives: Ban Gun Free Zones)
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To: Reily

There is a solution that would maintain Social Security and Medicare payments in perpetuity regardless of the number of entitled beneficiaries. Congress should change the trust fund law and completely eliminate it.

The trust fund was set up by FDR as a ploy to get Congress to approve SS. The whole board scheme envisioned that a group of smart people in 1935 could project what the beneficiary needs of the program would be 75 years into the future. This was a joke at the time and is even more of a joke now.

People can contribute whatever is required to FICA to reinforce their sense of entitlement and the starting age can be adjusted to reflect modern actuarial projections, but an entitlement is an entitlement. If the beneficiary expenditures exceed the FICA receipts, the promise must still be kept.

Fortunately, if the government is running out of money, it can legally print as much as it needs by adding to the reserves of the member banks who hold the Treasury department’s accounts. It’s not “borrowed” money because the government made it. They can make as much as they need to meet budget appropriations.

The bank in Monopoly can never go bankrupt or run out of money and neither can the Federal Reserve. That’s just how it works.


22 posted on 02/24/2023 3:29:21 PM PST by Dave Wright (i)
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To: nickcarraway

are they still milking it???


23 posted on 02/24/2023 3:33:15 PM PST by Chode (there is no fall back position, there's no rally point, there is no LZ... we're on our own. #FJB)
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To: nickcarraway

Krugman never gives up being so so wrong about pretty much everything.


24 posted on 02/24/2023 3:40:09 PM PST by Sam Gamgee
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To: nickcarraway

Let’s take the money we’re throwing down the Ukraine rat hole and use it to prop up Social Security. Or take all the money spent on queer studies and donate that to the Social Security fund... There really are solutions.


25 posted on 02/24/2023 3:46:32 PM PST by GOPJ ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=muw22wTePqQ Gumballs: Immigrants by the numbers.)
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To: alloysteel
The supposed “Lockbox funding” has been raided time and time again, for short-time contingencies,

That started with LBJ and has contiued every since. It was during the Vietnam war and the slogan was "Guns and Butter." What that really meant we will fund the war by raiding the social security trust fund and hand out largess to the public at the same time. They stole the money. It should be noted both Democrats and Republicans were in this together!

26 posted on 02/24/2023 3:56:00 PM PST by cpdiii (cane cutter-deckhand-roughneck-oil field trash- drilling fluid tech-geologist-pilot- pharmacist)
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To: nickcarraway

“Paul Krugman Says Social Security Is Sustainable. It’s Really Not.”

Actually he’s right. The law requires SS to take a haircut if revenues don’t meet the promises to their welfare recipients. So if revenue comes up 25% short, and the (non-existent) ‘trust fund’ is depleted, then their welfare recipients get 25% less than promised. It’s a bummer, but that’s what happens when Congress refuses to pay for their spending, IN REAL TIME, but instead pushes it down the road.


27 posted on 02/24/2023 4:12:32 PM PST by BobL
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To: nickcarraway

I would think the first and most logical step would be to identify all the folks that are getting checks, that shouldn’t be getting checks, mostly in the form of SSI.

How many illegals, family members of illegals-Birthright citizens- refugees-etc are getting a check because they hired one of those disability lawyers, who convinced a liberal hack judge that they deserve a check?


28 posted on 02/24/2023 4:22:30 PM PST by qaz123
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To: nickcarraway

Paul Krugman, former Enron consultant, says Enron is is sustainable.


29 posted on 02/24/2023 4:31:16 PM PST by KC_Conspirator
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To: nickcarraway

If Krugman told me the sun rises in the East I would have my doubts….


30 posted on 02/24/2023 6:03:50 PM PST by capydick (“the Bible are the answers Withinfor all the problems men face.the covers of )
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To: nickcarraway

That’s if we do nothing. The cap raised to 250K adds another 20 years to the program. And who loves hearing “oh I get a raise next week because no more social security taxes in may?


31 posted on 02/24/2023 7:29:23 PM PST by napscoordinator (DeSantis is a beast! Florida is the freest state in the country! )
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To: nickcarraway

Has anyone else noticed that Biden has purchased tons of radio advertising time to encourage people to sign up for Social Security Disability (SSI)?


32 posted on 02/24/2023 9:03:46 PM PST by Colorado Doug (Now I know how the Indians felt to be sold out for a few beads and trinkets)
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To: nickcarraway

Wrong S.S. is sustainable, it’s Medicare and Medicaid that aren’t.


33 posted on 02/24/2023 9:07:24 PM PST by Captain Peter Blood
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To: ridesthemiles

you could fix social security (or at least some of the problem) by going through the “disabled” and making sure they really are and are citizens.


34 posted on 02/25/2023 8:40:19 AM PST by cableguymn
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To: cgbg

Social security is theft from current generations to pay for past generations who did not prepare.

Previous SS money was stolen by congress by the way. That is why current funds pay for retirees.


35 posted on 02/25/2023 4:26:25 PM PST by joma89 (Buy weapons and ammo, folks, and have the will to use them.)
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