The Unlocked Box
How Bush is plundering Social Security to close
the deficit.
By Daniel Gross
Posted Friday, Jan. 9, 2004, at 10:51 AM PT
The International Monetary Fund, which usually frets about runaway
fiscal policies in developing countries, yesterday released
a report that warned of the dangers to the global economy posed by
the United States' lack of spending discipline, its reliance on foreign
creditors, and its failure to plan adequately for future government
liabilities.
Earlier this week, even as he
called for making the Bush tax cuts permanent, Treasury Secretary
John Snow pooh-poohed the deficit problem and insisted the government
has a plan to improve matters:
Our fiscal situation remains a matter of concern. With major
expenditures to protect our nation's homeland security and fight the
war on terror, coupled with a recovering economy, we still face a
deficit in the $500 billion range for the current fiscal year—larger
than anyone wants. But that size deficit, at roughly 4.5% of GDP
(compared with a modern peak of 6% during the 80s), is not
historically out of range; and it is entirely manageable, if we
continue the president's strong pro-growth economic policies and sound
fiscal restraint. Indeed, with adoption of the President's policies,
our projections show a solid path toward cutting the deficit in half,
toward a size that is below 2% of GDP, within the next five years.
The genial treasury secretary, a former deficit hawk, seems literally
incapable of speaking truthfully about the deficit. (The same holds for
National
Economic Council Chairman Stephen Friedman.) In fact, if we adopt
the president's policies—which include a host of new tax cuts and
massive new spending programs—the deficit won't fall 50 percent in the
next five years. It will grow substantially. And if President Bush and
the Republican-controlled Congress weren't already quietly using every
penny of the massive and growing Social Security surplus to cover
operating expenses—and planning to continue this habit—the deficits
would be even larger.
Back in 1983, as part of a deal to save Social Security from
impending demographic doom, Congress enacted
legislation to essentially increase payroll taxes and reduce
benefits. As a result, the government began to collect more Social
Security payroll taxes than it paid out to beneficiaries each year.
The theory was that the government would use these surpluses to
pay down the national debt. That way, when baby boomers retire—and
comparatively more people are collecting benefits while comparatively
fewer people are working—the government would be in a better position to
borrow the necessary funds to provide the promised benefits.
So much for theory. The reality? For the first 15 years, every penny
of the surplus was spent, first by Republican presidents and then by a
Democratic president. According to figures provided by the
Committee for a
Responsible Federal Budget, the surpluses were relatively
insignificant for much of this period. Between 1983 and 2001 a total of
$667 billion in excess Social Security payroll taxes was spent—about $35
billion per year. It was only in fiscal 1999 and 2000, when the
government ran so-called on-budget surpluses, that excess Social
Security funds were actually used to retire debt.
In the 2000 campaign, Vice President Al Gore said we should sequester
the Social Security surpluses in a "lockbox" to prevent appropriators
from spending them. Bush agreed in principle. But that commitment went
out the window soon after the inauguration. In his first three budgets,
Bush (who had the good fortune to take office at a time when the
surpluses were growing rapidly) and Congress used $480 billion in excess
Social Security payroll taxes to fund basic government operations—about
$160 billion per year!
By so doing, Washington spenders have masked the size of the deficit.
For Fiscal 2004—which began in October 2003—if you factor out the $164
billion Social Security surplus, the on-budget deficit will be at least
$639 billion, rather close to the modern peak of 6 percent of GDP. And
according to its own
projections (the bottom line of Table 8 represents the Social
Security surplus), the administration plans to spend an additional $990
billion in such funds between now and 2008. That year, according to the
Office of Management and Budget's projections, the on-budget deficit
will be about $464 billion. Only by using that year's $238 billion
Social Security surplus does the administration arrive at a total,
unified deficit of $226 billion. And the ultimate on-budget deficit will
almost certainly be worse. OMB has proven in the past
few years that its projections can't be trusted.
The accounting for Social Security surpluses has always been
dishonest. But in the past few years, the Bush administration has made
this shady accounting a central pillar of its fiscal strategy. The
unprecedented reliance on these funds hides the failure of the
administration to ensure that there is some reasonable correlation
between the resources it has at its disposal and the spending
commitments it makes. Bush & Co. have redesigned the tax system so that
collections of the progressive taxes that are supposed to fund
government operations—like individual income taxes—have plummeted.
Instead, with each passing year we rely for our current needs more on
the regressive payroll taxes that are supposed to fund our collective
retirement.
The persistence of the administration and its credulous allies in
eliding these facts is flabbergasting. Of course, for the Bush
administration to give an honest accounting of the deficits, and of the
role that Social Security surpluses play in keeping them down, would be
to admit the fundamental bankruptcy—no pun intended—of its adventuresome
fiscal experiment. |