Social Security is Not a Ponzi Scheme, Mr. Perry (It's worse)

Social Security has huge issues. I don't know where you got that chart, but they're already talking about reducing benefit payouts, and they will surely have to do so in the next 20 years - all against higher costs of living.

And what happens when life expectancies increase exponentially over the next 50 years? Does the chart factor that in?

He got it from Mother Jones. The far left wingnut site he gets most of his talking points from.
 
So a report from the Social Security Admin is trumped by a chart from Mother Jones who supposedly got their info from the Social Security Admin?

No, the Bush Social Security Trustees report has a similar chart (Figure II.D.5) which lacks the revenue figure (an intentional omission). The report itself and the spin on the report was prepared with a particular policy goal in mind. I'm simply looking at the data.
 
While the combined OASDI program continues to fail the long-range test of close actuarial balance, it does satisfy the conditions for short-range financial adequacy. Combined trust fund assets are projected to exceed one year’s projected benefit payments for more than ten years, through to 2035. However, the Disability Insurance (DI) program satisfies neither the long-range nor short-range tests for financial adequacy. DI costs have exceeded non-interest income since 2005 and trust fund exhaustion is projected for 2018; thus changes to improve the financial status of the DI program are needed soon.

After 2022, trust fund assets will be redeemed in amounts that exceed interest earnings until trust fund reserves are exhausted in 2036, one year earlier than was projected last year. Thereafter, tax income would be sufficient to pay only about three-quarters of scheduled benefits through 2085.

Yeah... no worries here.... just bury your head in the sand and chant with Dung 'Obama will save us, Obama will save us'
 
Link to the actual report and I will. It's figure II.D5.


Edit: Here:

http://www.ssa.gov/oact/tr/2011/tr2011.pdf

Page 14.

The link I provided links to the exact same report you just linked to douche bag. Both are directly from the SSA.gov website. You just linked to the pdf rather than the web based version you douche bag.

Bottom line is this.... they project the funds to be depleted by 2036. It states that clearly on BOTH links.
 
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The link I provided links to the exact same report you just linked to douche bag. Both are directly from the SSA.gov website. You just linked to the pdf rather than the web based version you douche bag.

No, you linked to a summary. I linked to the report from which the chart was taken.
 
No, you linked to a summary. I linked to the report from which the chart was taken.

I stand corrected on that point... the first pages of your report were the summary.... that said, you are still a douche bag.

Your chart (and I am being generous here) shows a deficit of 1% of GDP (it is actually higher). For a $14 TRILLION dollar economy, what is that deficit per year?

E. CONCLUSION
Under current law, the cost of Social Security will generally increase faster
than the program’s income because of the aging of the baby-boom generation,
continuing low fertility compared to the baby-boom period, and
increasing life expectancy. Based on the Trustees’ best estimate, program
cost will exceed non-interest income in 2011, as it did in 2010, and remain
higher throughout the remainder of the 75-year projection period. Social
Security’s combined trust funds are projected to increase with the help of
interest income through 2022 and allow full payment of scheduled benefits
on a timely basis until the trust funds become exhausted in 2036. At that
time, annual non-interest income to the trust funds is projected to equal about
77 percent of program cost. By 2085, annual non-interest income is projected
to be about 74 percent as large as the annual cost of the OASDI program.
 
I stand corrected on that point... the first pages of your report were the summary.... that said, you are still a douche bag.

Your chart (and I am being generous here) shows a deficit of 1% of GDP (it is actually higher). For a $14 TRILLION dollar economy, what is that deficit per year?


You aren't factoring in the trust fund.
 
Can anyone explain the downside of privatization to me?

No one thinks SS will be intact in 25 years or so. At best, most think that benefits will have to be cut by 25%. Try floating that one by seniors today...
 
You aren't factoring in the trust fund.

E. CONCLUSION
Under current law, the cost of Social Security will generally increase faster
than the program’s income because of the aging of the baby-boom generation,
continuing low fertility compared to the baby-boom period, and
increasing life expectancy. Based on the Trustees’ best estimate, program
cost will exceed non-interest income in 2011, as it did in 2010, and remain
higher throughout the remainder of the 75-year projection period. Social
Security’s combined trust funds are projected to increase with the help of
interest income through 2022 and allow full payment of scheduled benefits
on a timely basis until the trust funds become exhausted in 2036. At that
time, annual non-interest income to the trust funds is projected to equal about
77 percent of program cost. By 2085, annual non-interest income is projected
to be about 74 percent as large as the annual cost of the OASDI program.
 
Can anyone explain the downside of privatization to me?

No one thinks SS will be intact in 25 years or so. At best, most think that benefits will have to be cut by 25%. Try floating that one by seniors today...


THe only reason SS would not be intact in 25 years is if it is privatized. And your best case scenario is worse than the worst case scenario.
 
E. CONCLUSION
Under current law, the cost of Social Security will generally increase faster
than the program’s income because of the aging of the baby-boom generation,
continuing low fertility compared to the baby-boom period, and
increasing life expectancy. Based on the Trustees’ best estimate, program
cost will exceed non-interest income in 2011, as it did in 2010, and remain
higher throughout the remainder of the 75-year projection period. Social
Security’s combined trust funds are projected to increase with the help of
interest income through 2022 and allow full payment of scheduled benefits
on a timely basis until the trust funds become exhausted in 2036. At that
time, annual non-interest income to the trust funds is projected to equal about
77 percent of program cost. By 2085, annual non-interest income is projected
to be about 74 percent as large as the annual cost of the OASDI program.


Yes, but you aren't factoring in the 25 years of trust fund payments. The chart merely compares payroll taxes to benefits. If you factor in the trust fund, the fuding gap as a percentage of GDP is 0.7%.
 
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