Title: Facing Americas LongTerm Budget Challenges
1Facing Americas Long-Term Budget Challenges
- Brian Riedl
- Grover M. Hermann Fellow for Federal Budgetary
Affairs - The Heritage Foundation
- June 19, 2006
2Spending Growth is Accelerating
3Spending is Rising Across Government
- Defense and Homeland Security account for just
30 of all new spending since 2001. - Other 2001-06 Increases
- Education 137
- International Affairs 111
- Health Research/Regulation 78
- Social Security Medicare 38
- Antipoverty Programs 45
- Veterans Benefits 56
- Projected 2016 Budget Deficit 700-800 Billion
4The Problem
- 77 million baby boomers will soon begin retiring.
- Ratio of workers supporting each retiree
- 1945 42-to-1
- 1950 15-to-1
- 1960 5-to-1
- 2005 3-to-1
- 2030 2-to-1
- By 2030, a married couple will have to support
themselves, their children and their very own
retiree. - In addition to demographics, Medicare also must
deal with rising health care costs. - Senior health care will also push up Medicaid
costs.
5Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid Costs As
a Percent of GDP
6Option 1 Tax IncreasesPer Household
Translated Into 2005 GDP
7Option 1 Implications
- Would have to raise taxes every year until they
were 10 of GDP higher than today. - In todays economy, a 10 of GDP tax increase
would average 11,000 per household. - Marginal tax rates would likely more than double.
- Combined federal, state, and local taxes would
reach European levels. - Generally, these high tax rates have been shown
to reduce economic growth, depress incomes, and
increase unemployment.
8Option 2 Other Program CutsYearly Budget
Breakdown, Assuming No Tax Hikes or Budget
Deficits
9 Option 2 Implications
- Would have to immediately begin terminating
programs to make room for Social Security,
Medicare, Medicaid, and interest on past debt. - By 2026, defense would be the only other
remaining program. - By 2045, defense would have to be eliminated too.
- By that point, 100 of the budget would go
towards Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and
interest on past debt. - Clearly, this is not realistic.
10Option 3 Continue Current Policies And Cover
Shortfalls With Budget Deficits
11Option 3 Implications
- Hold all taxes and other spending constant as a
percent of GDP, and then cover shortfalls with
budget deficits. - Borrowing 10 more of GDP per year (1.2 trillion
more in todays economy) would raise the federal
debt to levels never seen before. - Such debt could increase interest rates, which
would in turn trigger an exponential increase in
federal debt and net interest costs. - Depending on interest rates, 2005-2050 net
interest spending alone (adjusted into todays
GDP) could range from 44 trillion to 118
trillion. - Such large expenses could create an economic
crisis.
12Option 4 Modernize Social Security, Medicare,
and Medicaid
- Reform is the only way to avoid the scenarios
listed above. Delays only push up the final
reform costs. - Social Security reform may involve transitioning
to a system whereby individuals payroll taxes go
into their own personal retirement fund. - Medicare and Medicaid reforms allowing more
consumer choice and competition may hold down
costs. - Limiting the Medicare drug entitlement to
low-income seniors would save 8.1 trillion over
the next 75 years an amount twice as large as
the entire Social Security shortfall.
13Conclusion
- This issue is about more than economics.
- There is a moral question of whether one
generation should hand a multi-trillion dollar
retirement bill over to the next generation. - In the absence of fundamental reform, those
entering the workforce today will experience both
higher lifetime tax rates and lower incomes than
their parents as a result of these retirement
costs.