So long, surplus: Social Security unstimulated.

AuthorDoherty, Brian
PositionCitings

THE "SOCIAL Security surplus" has vanished. That figure has long referred to the amount in Social Security taxes collected over and above the amount the system pays out that year. The federal government spends the leftovers every year, issuing itself an IOU rather than setting money aside for future liabilities. According to calculations from both the White House and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the year of reckoning when Social Security spending exceeds Social Security tax revenue has moved up from 2017 to ... 2009.

Kevin Hassett, an economist at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, is sounding the alarm about this undercovered side-effect of the recession. In recent years, Hassett points out, Social Security "has raised $50 billion to $100 billion more in payroll taxes than it paid out in benefits. Sure, deficits were expected far off in the future, but the current program was on sound financial footing." As Time recently noted, however, "Social Security benefits ($659 billion, according to the CBO) will exceed payroll taxes ($653 billion) in fiscal 2009 for the first time since 1984. Payroll tax receipts generally hold up much better in...

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