March 2, 2004/New York TIMES
NEWS ANALYSIS 
Medicare and Social Security Challenge
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS


WASHINGTON, March 1 - When Alan Greenspan urged Congress last week to
cut future benefits in Social Security and Medicare, sending elected
officials to the barricades, he was if anything understating the
magnitude of the problems ahead. Today's budget deficits are measured in
the hundreds of billions, but the looming shortfalls for the two
retirement programs are projected to be in the tens of trillions of
dollars.

The Bush administration has estimated that the gap between promises
under current law and the revenues expected will total $18 trillion over
the next 75 years. But an internal study in 2002 by the Treasury
Department, looking much further ahead, concluded that the gap was
actually $44 trillion - and would climb each year that nothing was done.

Indeed, the numbers are so big and extend so far into the future that
they border on the surreal. Analysts in both Congress and the
administration warn that the flood of retiring baby boomers will cause
federal spending on old-age benefits to eventually consume as much of
the nation's economy as the entire federal budget does now. And while
the problems would be acute even if today's federal budget were
balanced, the budget deficits that seem likely for the rest of the
decade make matters worse. That is because the government is borrowing
more than $200 billion a year from the Social Security and Medicare
trust funds to finance its operating deficits.

In theory, the two giant trust funds are accumulating huge surpluses
that can be used to pay for benefits when the baby boomers retire and
the systems start taking in less than they are paying out. In practice,
those surpluses are being spent, and the government will probably have
to borrow enormous sums to meet its obligations to retirees.

"It is time to start telling people the truth," said Laurence Kotlikoff,
a professor of economics at Boston University and a longtime analyst of
the issue. "Suggesting that some minor adjustments to Social Security
will solve the problem is doing a disservice."

Mr. Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, provoked a political
tempest when he told members of the House Budget Committee last week
that Congress needed to trim future Social Security and Medicare
benefits to head off a fiscal calamity in decades to come.

Mr. Greenspan proposed adjustments in how the government increases
benefits to keep up with inflation and suggested pushing back retirement
ages to better reflect increased life expectancy. 

Democrats immediately attacked the proposed cuts, saying they would be
unnecessary if President Bush had not been running up large annual
budget deficits just before millions of baby boomers reach retirement
age.

"Cutting Social Security benefits is not the way to rein in the
irresponsible Bush budget deficit,'' chided Senator Tom Daschle of South
Dakota, the Senate Democratic leader.

President Bush and Republican lawmakers distanced themselves as well,
saying that much of the problem could be averted by setting up private
savings accounts. 

But as precarious and uncertain as long-range forecasts are, most
experts agree that the combined challenges of Social Security and
Medicare are too big to be addressed without politically painful
remedies.

The number of retirees is expected to soar from about 40 million today
to more than 76 million by 2030, which means that fewer dollars will be
coming in from payroll taxes and many more dollars will be going out in
retirement and medical benefits. 

The oldest baby boomers turn 65 in 2011, and by one estimate a husband
and wife who retire that year are likely to collect $700,000 in benefits
before they die. 

Trustees of the Medicare and Social Security funds predict that the two
programs will run surpluses of more than $200 billion a year for at
least the next decade. But the Medicare trust fund will start running
deficits in 2013 and run out of money by 2026. Starting in 2018, the
Social Security System starts paying out more than it takes in and will
have to dip into its trust fund. By 2044, the trust fund will be
exhausted. 

Most experts say the problems of Social Security are much smaller and
more predictable than those of Medicare, because retirement formulas are
fairly simple and the cost of benefits depends primarily on demographic
trends that are quite predictable.

But Medicare's condition is more ominous, because medical costs have
been rising much faster than the overall rate of inflation and the
demand for health care is expected to soar as the baby boomers retire.

The Bush administration estimated last year that Medicare's obligations
would be more than $10 trillion over the next 75 years. But that was
before President Bush signed the law that will add prescription drug
benefits to Medicare - which the administration now predicts will cost
$540 billion over the next 10 years. The costs would climb rapidly after
that, as the number of elderly people soars. The Congressional Budget
Office has predicted that the new program could cost as much as $2
trillion in its second decade.

Mr. Bush and many administration officials contend that much of Social
Security's problems could be solved by letting people divert some of
their payroll contributions to private investment accounts they might
manage for themselves.

But some experts say that the government would have to borrow as much as
$1 trillion over the next several decades to make up for the lost
revenues and pay retirees benefits earned under the old system.

And the Congressional Budget Office, in a report on privatization plans
last year, said none of the proposals would have much effect.

"Using government resources to buy stocks and bonds, without other
spending and tax changes, would not automatically lead to an increase in
the nation's pool of investment resources,'' the budget office
concluded. "There is no such thing as a free lunch.''

Some experts contend that even the administration's chilling projections
about the looming problems of Social Security seriously understate the
problem.

In 2002, two senior economists at the Treasury Department were asked by
Paul H. O'Neill, then the Treasury secretary, to come up with a
comprehensive estimate of the federal government's long-term fiscal
problems. The total, calculated Kent Smetters, then a deputy assistant
secretary for economic policy, and Jagadessh Gokhale, an economist on
loan to the Treasury from the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, was an
almost unthinkable $44 trillion. 

That projection was swiftly disavowed by the administration. Rob
Nichols, a spokesman for the Treasury Department, said the White House
never intended to use the study in its official budget forecast. "They
were doing what they called an independent paper,'' he said. 

Mr. Gokhale, now a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a policy
research group in Washington, recalled matters differently. "At some
point, late in the game, it was decided that it wouldn't be in the
budget,'' he said. "In my opinion, if they had reported these numbers,
they would have gotten a lot of credit.''

Professor Kotlikoff of Boston University has devised a "menu of pain''
to lay out different ways of bridging the gap. The choices range from an
immediate increase in federal income taxes of 69 percent to an immediate
cut in Social Security and Medicare benefits of 45 percent. 

And those numbers may be too low, he said, because even the disavowed
Treasury estimate for the shortfall may be too low. Adding in the new
prescription drug program, he said, the imbalance is closer to $51
trillion.

Whether one accepts the administration's forecast or that of the
disavowed study, everyone agrees that the potential problems with Social
Security and Medicare dwarf the short-term problems of balancing the
budget.

"The issue is entitlements,'' said N. Gregory Mankiw, chairman of the
White House Council of Economic Advisers. "That is a huge challenge, but
it would be a challenge even if we had a balanced budget today.''

------------------------
Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine

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