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55 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1996)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0053 and id is 1 raw text is: August 30, 1996 No. 55
DEALING WITH SOCIAL SECURITY
DEFICITS: LIMITED CHOICES,
UNLIMITED OPPORTUNITY
This advisory is the second in a series on the
outlook for Social Security's retirement and
disability programs (Old Age and Survivors
Insurance and Disability Insurance - OASDI).
The first advisory reported on
the large deficits projected for
the system  (based on then-
available numbers in the 1995 Simpl raising
Trustees  Report).    That    patch up OAS
advisory   explained  how     answer.     it
demographic changes and the   employment.
ever-increasing per capita real  as 10 million.
benefits  promised   under
current law  will lead the
system into inevitable bankruptcy and/or wreck the
federal budget.
1996 Trustees Report - same bad news
The new 1996 Trustees Report, released in June,
shows very little change from the 1995 projections.
The retirement system is projected to begin running
operating deficits - benefit payments in excess of
tax revenue - in 2012, a year earlier than assumed
in the previous report. The program is assumed to
exhaust its trust fund in 2029, a year earlier than
previously projected. The very long term deficits
are projected to be very slightly lower than
assumed in the last report due to minor revisions in

pay
DJI an
woJ
Ultim
jobs c

economic and population assumptions. By the end
of the forecast period, 2070, OASDI deficits will
exceed $400 billion dollars per year in inflation-
adjusted 1996 dollars, equal to 5.5% of taxable
payroll or nearly 2% of GDP. (See table.) Even
worse, if Medicare (Part A, Hospital Insurance -
HI) is factored in, the combined OASDI and HI
deficits eventually approach $1.17 trillion annually,
in real 1996 dollars, almost 14% of taxable payroll
and over 5.5% of GDP (not shown).
Limited options for dealing with the deficit
There are very few options for dealing with the
OASDI deficits, and they have very different
economic impacts.
Options for patching up the existing social
security system are very limited. They consist of
raising the payroll tax rate sharply, massive federal
borrowing, or freezing real
benefits. These options are
teither bad for the economy
doi tax rat toe  and people when they are of
d HI is not the  working age, or bad for people
uld   devastate    when they reach retirement
ately, aS  aly    age.
'ould be lost.
The only alternative that
could create all winners and
no losers is to replace the system, in part or, better,
in whole, with a program of real private saving.
Raise payroll taxes
Simply raising payroll tax rates to patch up
OASDI and HI is not the answer.     It would
devastate employment. Ultimately, as many as 10
million jobs could be lost.
The current payroll tax is 15.3 percent, half
paid by the worker and half paid by the employer.
Of that total, 10.6 percent is permanently allocated
to retirement and survivors benefits, 1.8 percent to
disability insurance, and 2.9 to HI.1

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 * Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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