Yet liberals want to spend more?

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As currently structured, entitlement programs can’t keep up with longer life expectancies and changing demographics.


  • Soon, one-third of Americans will be retired and will spend one-third of their lives in retirement. Meanwhile, the ratio of workers to retirees has dropped precipitously.
  • During this decade and the next, the number of Americans 65 or older will jump 75 percent, while those of working age will nudge up by just 7 percent.

Within a decade, the total price for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid will reach $3 trillion a year, but we’ll have fewer workers paying into the system and supporting those growing costs.

Entitlement programs are not self-funding, and for the most part, never have been.

  • Medicare has had a cash shortfall every year since its creation except two: 1966 and 1974. Medicare’s annual cash shortfall in 2011 was $288 billion.
  • Social Security had a cash flow deficit of $58 billion in 2012.

Money must be borrowed to make up for these shortfalls, making entitlements primary drivers of our deficits.

The trust fund for the Social Security Disability Insurance program will be exhausted in just three years.

  • The trust fund for Medicare Part A, which pays for hospital services, will go bankrupt in 13 years. That projection is based on a “rosy scenario” under which Congress will do something it has refused to do time and time again — cut payments to doctors.
  • Social Security will be unable to pay full benefits beginning in 2033 and will be forced to reduce payments by 23 percent.
 
How are these entitlements going to be paid for?

Social Security isn't an entitlement.

I've paid into it my entire life in order to ensure I have sufficient income to live a comfortable life during my retirement years.

Only greedy slime like you like to pretend it's an entitlement.
 
Social Security isn't an entitlement. I've paid into it my entire life in order to ensure I have sufficient income to live a comfortable life during my retirement years. Only greedy slime like you like to pretend it's an entitlement.

So Wikipedia is greedy slime?

In the United States, Social Security and Medicare are examples of entitlement programs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entitlement


Social Security will be unable to pay full benefits beginning in 2033 and will be forced to reduce payments by 23 percent.

What's your solution?
 
And yet the fact remains....that Wikipedia says it is.

Well since I won't be collecting my SS benefits from Wikipedia, or from you for that matter; you'll forgive me for ignoring what they, and you, have to say on the subject of whether or not it is an "entitlement".
 
Well since I won't be collecting my SS benefits from Wikipedia, or from you for that matter; you'll forgive me for ignoring what they, and you, have to say on the subject of whether or not it is an "entitlement".

And yet the fact remains that you claimed this:

So what? You haven't shown where Wikipedia claimed Social Security was an entitlement.

after I had, in fact already shown just that.

Social Security will be unable to pay full benefits beginning in 2033 and will be forced to reduce payments by 23 percent.

What's your solution?
 
And yet the fact remains that you claimed this:



after I had, in fact already shown just that.

Social Security will be unable to pay full benefits beginning in 2033 and will be forced to reduce payments by 23 percent.

What's your solution?

Well excuuuuuuuuse me.

Allow me to correct my poorly worded prior statement...

Neither you, nor Wikipedia has PROVEN your claim that Social Security is an entitlement.

A statement on Wikipedia is not PROOF of anything.

As to my solution?

I plan to continue to ignore the bullshit spread by liars like you.
 
Well excuuuuuuuuse me. Allow me to correct my poorly worded prior statement...
Neither you, nor Wikipedia has PROVEN your claim that Social Security is an entitlement. A statement on Wikipedia is not PROOF of anything. As to my solution? I plan to continue to ignore the bullshit spread by liars like you.


ostrich.jpg
 
I don't care that they're running a deficit. They gaurantee money to retirees, not to debt collectors. And there are ways to increase government revenues and decrease spending without sacraficing that.
 
I guess I should have explained.

The ostrich represents you hiding from the fact that Social Security will become insolvent if measures are not taken.

http://www.ssa.gov/oact/trsum/

Are the Social Security trustees spreading "bullshit lies"?

Wrong...the Ostrich represents you trying to divert the discussion away from the lie you've been repeating that SS is an entitlement.

I have never once disputed your point that SS MIGHT SOME DAY become insolvent if measures aren't taken.

My dispute with you is your claim that SS is an "entitlement", which it clearly is not.
 
The two political parties actually have agreed in the last two years to some significant steps to reduce deficits down the road.

One big question is whether the budget points a way toward restraining the largest long-term drivers of the deficit, which are government entitlement programs, particularly for health care.

The White House says its budget blueprint represents a good start down that path by offering proposals to curb the growth of Social Security, Medicare and other federal benefits programs.

Obama proposed curbing the growth of Social Security benefits over time by switching to a slower-growing gauge of inflation.

Economists forecast that the country's fiscal problems then would begin to really snowball within about 10 years, driven largely by the baby boom generation drawing Social Security and Medicare benefits in rising numbers, as well as by climbing interest rates.

Roughly 46 million Americans received Social Security retirement benefits in 2012, a figure forecast to grow 40% by 2023, with a similar increase for Medicare.

Given that pressure, the Medicare fund that pays hospital bills is expected to burn through its reserves by 2024.

The Social Security system is in better shape, but its growing obligations will pressure the government to repay money it borrowed from the program to cover other costs.






http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324240804578414570933697386.html
 
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