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Go-broke dates pushed back for Social Security, Medicare

FILE - A Social Security card is displayed on Oct. 12, 2021, in Tigard, Ore. The annual Social Security and Medicare trustees report released Thursday, June 2, 2022, says Social Securitys trust fund will be unable to pay full benefits in 2035, instead of last year's estimate of 2034, and the year before that which estimated an exhaustion date of 2035. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane, File) (Jenny Kane, Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

WASHINGTON ā€“ A stronger-than-expected economic recovery from the pandemic has pushed back the go-broke dates for Social Security and Medicare, but officials warn that the current economic turbulence is putting additional pressures on the bedrock retirement programs.

The annual Social Security and Medicare trustees report released Thursday says Social Securityā€™s trust fund will be unable to pay full benefits beginning in 2035, instead of last year's estimate of 2034. The year before that it estimated an exhaustion date of 2035.

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The projected depletion date for Medicareā€™s trust fund for inpatient hospital care moved back two years to 2028 from last yearā€™s forecast of 2026.

ā€œEconomic recovery from the 2020 recession has been stronger and faster than assumed in last yearā€™s reports, with positive effects on the projected actuarial status of the trust funds in these reports,ā€ the report states.

President Joe Biden said in a statement that the report ā€œshows that the strong economic recovery driven by my economic and vaccination plans has strengthened programs that millions of Americans rely on and has put our nation in a better fiscal position.ā€

Forecasters said in the report that the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic will have no net effect on their long-range projections. But they also noted that assumptions for their latest report were made in February, which was before cases began climbing again nationally and inflation rose even higher.

Social Security pays benefits to more than 65 million Americans, mainly retirees as well as disabled people and survivors of deceased workers. Medicare covers roughly 64 million older and disabled people.

When the Social Security trust fund is depleted the government will be able to pay 80% of scheduled benefits, the report said. Medicare will be able to pay 90% of total scheduled benefits when the fund is depleted.

Income for Medicareā€™s hospital insurance fund is projected to be higher than estimates from last year because the number of covered workers who help fund it and their average wages are both expected to be higher.

A main source of financing is payroll taxes on earnings paid by employees and employers. About 183 million people paid those taxes in 2021.

The report projects the Medicare ā€œPart Bā€ premium for outpatient coverage to remain stable at $170.10 a month. But administration officials said that projection, based on information from earlier this year, doesnā€™t reflect an expected drop due to an overestimation of the cost of covering the Alzheimerā€™s treatment Aduhelm.

The trustees of Social Security and Medicare include the secretaries of Treasury, Health and Human Services, and Labor, as well as the Social Security commissioner. They are supposed to be joined by two ā€œpublic trustees,ā€ however those positions have been vacant since 2015.

A representative from the White House did not respond to an email inquiry about whether the president intends to nominate new public trustees.

The trustees report is an added reminder of the U.S. governmentā€™s financial troubles, as it juggles historically high inflation, recovery from a pandemic and the war in Ukraine.

AARP CEO Jo Ann Jenkins said the reports ā€œsend a clear message to Congress: despite the short-term improvement, you must act to protect the benefits people have earned and paid into both now and for the long-term.ā€

"The stakes are too high for the millions of Americans who rely on Medicare and Social Security for their health and financial wellbeing," she said.

This year, Social Security retirees got a 5.9% boost in benefits, the biggest cost-of-living adjustment, also known as COLA, in 39 years.

Ron Thompson Jr, a 24 year-old D.C. resident, says this yearā€™s cost of living increase has been ā€œtransformationalā€ as a trickle-down benefit to his family, as he helps take care of his 77-year-old grandmother, who lives on the other side of town.

Transportation costs, which has surged due to high inflation, have made it difficult for Thompson and his mother to drive to take care of his grandmother.

ā€œAll of us have experienced high costs,ā€ Thompson said.

Because his grandmother can pass on some of her Social Security benefits to her daughter to help pay for gasoline costs, ā€œthe adjustment is a cushion my mom can rest onā€ as she travels to care for Thompsonā€™s grandmother.

A Treasury official said this year's high inflation could prompt an 8% percent increase in benefits next year.

Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said in a statement that "policymakers need to get their heads out of the sand and stop pretending these vital programsā€™ funding issues will fix themselves.ā€

A new Congressional Budget Office report states that the biggest drivers of debt rising in relation to GDP are increasing interest costs and spending for Medicare and Social Security. An aging population drives those numbers.

Charles Blahous, a senior economic adviser to former President George W. Bush and a public trustee of Social Security and Medicare during the Obama administration, told The Associated Press that ā€œthe first thing thatā€™s important to do is grasp the baseline, itā€™s very dire,ā€ he said.

Blahous says failing to finance Social Security and Medicare under its current structure ā€œwould subject the programs to perpetual renegotiation,ā€ with the threat of benefit cuts or elimination in the future.

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., is proposing an 11-point governance plan that would require Congress to come up with a proposal to adequately fund the programs or potentially phase them out.

Biden said to Scott's plan: ā€œThatā€™s not the way to strengthen these programs.ā€

ā€œI will work with anyone willing to have an open and honest conversation about growing our economy, bringing down inflation, improving our fiscal position, and strengthening the programs that millions of Americans rely on," Biden said.

ā€œIf we were to wait until the 2030sā€ to take action, Blahous said, ā€œthe annual shortfall would be so large ā€” so many times larger that itā€™s not possible to fathom."

House Ways and Means Chairman, Richard E. Neal, D-Mass., said in a statement that ā€œDemocrats will continue to fight to ensure that these essential programs remain strong, through good times and bad.ā€

___

Murphy reported from Indianapolis.


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