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Issue 1, January/February 2005
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Social Security and Medicare: No Free
Lunch
Public attention has recently
focused on the federal budget outlook for the coming
decade.[1] But as Alan Greenspan and other observers
have noted, the real budget challenge is the long-run
growth of Social Security and Medicare.
These programs are big and getting
bigger, outpacing the growth of revenue. Large tax increases
or benefit cuts will occur to address this shortfall,
no matter how much we might wish they could be avoided.
In their current form, Social
Security and Medicare involve transfer payments from
the young to the elderly rather than actual saving.
Scaling back these transfer payments would increase
national saving and give future generations a better
standard of living. However, it would also impose a
transition cost on current generations.
Many people hope for, and some
promise, a free lunch that avoids this transition cost.
Unfortunately, there is none. It is possible to shift
the burden from one group of people to another, but
no policy proposal—including privatization—
offers an escape from that burden. If future generations
are to be made better off, the transition cost must
be paid.
Programs Are Big—And Getting
Bigger
Chart 1 shows federal spending,
other than interest on the debt, as a share of GDP.
From 1960 through 2004, such spending fluctuated around
an average value of 17.3 percent of GDP. But the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) paints a much different picture
for the future in its December 2003 long-run budget
projection. Under CBO’s intermediate assumptions,
non-interest spending is projected to rise relentlessly,
to 23.4 percent of GDP by 2050, with no letup in sight.

The federal budget includes thousands
of spending programs, but the spending surge is primarily
driven by just two—Social Security and Medicare
(Chart 2). In fact, CBO projects that non-interest
programs other than Social Security and Medicare will
shrink from 11.1 percent of GDP in 2004 to 9.0 percent
in 2050. (The federal portion of Medicaid will grow
from 1.5 percent to 3.3 percent, while all other non-interest
programs will shrink from 9.6 percent to 5.7 percent.)
If these other programs don’t shrink, the total
spending growth will be even more dramatic.

How large will Social Security
and Medicare become? From 2004 to 2050, Social Security
spending will rise from 4.2 percent of GDP to 6.2 percent.
Over the same period, Medicare will grow explosively,
from 2.5 percent of GDP to 8.3 percent.
A variety of factors contribute
to this growth. One factor is the retirement of the
baby boom generation, which will swell the ranks of
retirees for the next few decades. That’s a temporary
phenomenon, though. The Medicare prescription drug benefit
that takes effect in 2006 will also raise costs, but
it is a secondary factor.
The two forces that account for
most of the long-run spending surge are longer life
spans and rising medical costs.
Under the Social Security trustees’
intermediate projection, life expectancy at age 65,
which is now about 17 years, will steadily rise by almost
half a year per decade (Chart 3). CBO uses
this same assumption in its long-run budget projections
mentioned above. The Census Bureau, like many private
demographers, projects increases about twice as rapid—nearly
one year per decade.[2] And the faster life spans rise,
the more Social Security and Medicare must pay.

The second force driving up program
spending is the ongoing rise in medical costs. Under
the Medicare trustees’ intermediate projection,
spending per beneficiary in Medicare Part A (the hospital
part of the program) will quintuple over the next 75
years, even after adjusting for overall inflation (Chart
4 ). Of course, medical costs are hard to predict,
but some experts believe that costs will rise even more
rapidly, as they have done in the past, which would
place an even greater strain on Medicare.[3]

Costs Will Outpace Revenue
Although spending is scheduled
to grow sharply under current law, revenue is not scheduled
to keep pace.
Social Security and Medicare Part
A are financed by earmarked taxes—primarily a
payroll tax on employee compensation and an accompanying
tax on self-employment income.[4] The combined tax rate
is 15.3 percent up to a threshold ($90,000 in 2005)
linked to national average wages, and is 2.9 percent
thereafter.
This tax rate is not automatically
adjusted for increases in life span or medical costs,
even though these factors do automatically increase
spending. As a result, future payroll tax revenue will
not be sufficient to cover future benefit costs. The
trustees estimate that Medicare Part A will be unable
to pay full benefits after 2019 and that Social Security
will be unable to do so after 2042. Of course, the exact
years depend on various assumptions, but the day will
come when revenue no longer covers costs.
How can this financial shortfall
be addressed? To maintain promised benefits, we will
have to come up with more money. How much more? If we
continue to rely on the payroll tax and we keep revenue
and spending in balance each year, the tax rate would
need to rise ever higher to keep up with rising costs.
By 2080, the tax rate would have to roughly double,
to 31 percent, to cover that year’s Social Security
and Medicare Part A benefits.[5]
Or, the shortfall could be addressed
through income tax hikes and discretionary spending
cuts. For example, we could raise income tax revenue
by about one-third, but such a large tax increase would
likely reduce economic output and have other undesirable
consequences. On the spending side, even the complete
elimination of spending other than Social Security,
Medicare, Medicaid and interest wouldn’t be enough
to cover the shortfall. But substantial tax hikes could
be combined with substantial spending cuts to raise
the required amount of money.
The alternative is to reduce promised
benefits, and there are many ways to do this. Eligibility
ages for Social Security and Medicare could be raised
by several years in line with longer life spans. Means
tests could be imposed on either or both of these programs,
making them more like welfare. Social Security cost-of-living
adjustments could be trimmed by using a more conservative
measure of inflation, as Alan Greenspan and others have
proposed.
Two other possibilities would
change the rate at which future benefits rise. Social
Security benefits for each cohort of retirees are currently
tied to average wages in the economy at the time the
cohort attains age 60. Since prices generally rise more
slowly than wages, we could reduce future spending by
tying those benefit levels to prices rather than wages.
This “price indexation” was a leading option
discussed by the presidential commission on Social Security.[6]
A similar proposal could be applied
to Medicare. Under current law, Medicare benefits are
tied to rapidly rising medical costs. We could reduce
future spending by linking those benefits to wages or
even to prices.[7]
Reducing promised benefits doesn’t
necessarily mean future retirees would receive smaller
benefit checks than current retirees do. But it does
mean they’d receive less than current law now
promises them—about 50 percent less in 2080, if
the books are to balance in that year.
Reform plans can be simple or
complicated, can raise taxes or cut promised benefits,
can build up a trust fund or privatize the system—there
are at least as many plans as there are economists.
But the major economic effect of any reform plan depends
on one simple feature: whether the plan reduces transfer
payments from the young to the old. Permanently reducing
these transfers helps every future generation enjoy
a better standard of living but requires current generations
to bear a transition cost. Maintaining the transfers
helps current generations avoid sacrifice but requires
every future generation to pay the tab in the form of
a permanently lower standard of living. The impact of
a plan on these transfers, and only that impact, determines
the gains to future generations and the transition cost
imposed on current generations.
To understand these conclusions,
let’s look at how Social Security and Medicare
operate.
Pay-as-You-Go Retirement Programs
Social Security and Medicare
are pay-as-you-go retirement programs. This means contributions
by workers are not saved or invested, but are immediately
consumed by the elderly.
Members of any working generation
could receive substantially greater retirement income
if they could save the money rather than transfer it
to their parents. Economists have shown that a pay-as-you-go
system offers a long-run below-market rate of return
equal to the growth rate of national labor income, which
has averaged 3.4 percent over the past 75 years. If
each generation saves for itself, it can earn a market
return equal to the pretax marginal product of capital,
which has averaged about 6 percent. Over a working lifetime,
the latter return offers about twice as large a payoff.
[8]
For this reason, future generations
would be better off if they could put less money into
the pay-as-you-go system and invest more. Each generation
would receive less money from its children but would
come out ahead because it could earn market returns
on the money it would otherwise transfer to its parents.
This would permanently increase national saving and
enlarge the nation’s capital stock, which would
ensure those generations a better standard of living.
Furthermore, the social protections provided by the
current system could be maintained. (See the box titled
“Preserving Social Protections.”)
Transition Cost
As just discussed, future
generations would greatly benefit if we reduce transfer
payments from the young to the elderly rather than compel
the young to finance ever-higher transfers in perpetuity.
Future generations would earn a higher rate of return
than they can at present, without undermining social
protections.
But there is an elephant in the
room: the benefits owed to current retirees.
Simply put, current retirees have
been promised benefits for which they did not save.
(Although they paid taxes into the system during their
working years, their taxes were transferred to their
parents rather than saved.) A severe reduction in benefits
would inflict a catastrophic transition cost on those
retirees, who are depending on their children to fund
their retirement. And indeed, even the most ardent advocates
of reform would leave those in or near retirement largely
untouched. For this reason, reforms would likely target
current workers rather than current retirees. Those
workers would then bear the transition cost, making
full transfers to their parents while working but receiving
reduced transfers from their children upon retirement.
Of course, the cuts could be delayed
by another generation and even another. But eventually,
some generation has to bear the transition cost if the
system is to be reformed. That generation pays full
benefits to its parents but does not receive full benefits
from its children. In effect, that generation pays twice.
Reform reduces that generation’s rate of return
even as it raises future generations’ returns.
If future generations are forced
to11 bear the full cost of correcting the fiscal imbalance,
they will face a heavy burden indeed. Chart 5 shows
the lifetime net tax rate faced by current and future
generations. The lifetime net tax rate is the present
value of federal, state and local taxes minus the present
value of federal, state and local transfer payments
(including Social Security and Medicare), divided by
the present value of labor income. While current generations
face lifetime net tax rates between 25 and 32 percent,
those generations born after 1995 face a lifetime net
tax rate of almost 50 percent. That’s high by
almost any standard and is largely due to the current
entitlement system. Unfortunately, we can reduce their
load only by shouldering some of the burden ourselves.

No Free Lunch
It’s important to understand
there is no free lunch. The only way to consume more
in the future is to save more in the present, which
requires a sacrifice of consumption today. A formal
mathematical analysis reveals that the transition cost
imposed on current generations must equal in present
discounted value (when discounted at the pretax marginal
product of capital) the gains enjoyed by subsequent
generations.[9] In layman’s terms, someone must
pay, and the only question is who that someone will
be. The following discussion explains why various proposals
for avoiding this burden fail to do so.
No Free Lunch from General Government
Revenue. Some reform
plans call for the use of general government revenue
during the transition. Under this approach, benefits
would be reduced one generation after a reduction in
payroll taxes, with general revenues covering the financing
shortfall. For example, today’s workers might
receive a reduction in payroll taxes while today’s
retirees would still receive full benefits (financed
from general revenue rather than from payroll taxes).
Benefit reductions would be deferred until today’s
workers retire.
At first glance, this might seem
to avoid saddling any generation with a transition cost.
Today’s retirees would be protected. Although
today’s workers would receive lower benefits when
they retire, that burden would be more than offset by
the lower payroll taxes they would pay while working.
But the transition cost would
still be present. The revenue used to pay benefits to
today’s retirees would not appear from nowhere.
Like all government revenue, it would come from the
American people. One or more generations would have
to bear tax increases or spending cuts to provide the
general revenue, thereby paying the transition cost.
The size of the transfers between young and elderly
is what matters, not whether they are financed with
payroll taxes or general government revenue.
No Free Lunch from Debt Issuance.
While the above discussion
assumes that general revenue would be obtained from
tax increases or spending cuts, some plans call for
the revenue to instead be obtained through borrowing.
Debt issuance would offer no free lunch, however, because
the debt would have to be serviced or retired.
If the debt were retired, national
saving would increase and future generations would gain.
However, one or more generations would have to bear
tax increases or spending cuts to finance the debt repayment,
thereby paying the transition cost.
If the debt were not retired,
it would have to be permanently serviced. Every future
generation would bear tax increases or spending cuts
to pay the interest, which would (it turns out) impose
the same burden as they would bear from continuing the
pay-as-you-go system. And national saving wouldn’t
rise because the extra debt would exactly offset the
increase in personal saving. This policy would not reduce
transfers from the young to the elderly; it would merely
relabel those transfers as interest payments rather
than retirement benefits. Because the burden imposed
by a pay-as-you-go retirement system is economically
equivalent to the burden of government debt, replacing
the one burden by the other would have no real effects,
either good or ill.[10]
No Free Lunch from Privatization.
Some people think the transition
cost can be avoided through mandatory individual accounts.
It can’t be, however, because the money invested
in the accounts would have to come from somewhere. If
the money would otherwise have been transferred to the
elderly, national saving would increase and future generations
would gain—but those generations receiving the
smaller transfers after paying the larger ones would
bear the transition cost. If the money were obtained
by issuing government debt, then (as explained above)
servicing that debt would cause the hoped-for gains
to evaporate because the additional government borrowing
would exactly offset the additional personal saving.
By themselves, individual accounts
do nothing to increase national saving or increase rates
of return—those effects occur only if transfers
from young to elderly are reduced.[11] The partial privatization
discussed in the box “Preserving Social Protections”
could raise returns for future generations while maintaining
social protections for those generations, but it would
not and could not avoid the transition cost.
Inescapable Reality.
The inescapable reality is
that the pay-as-you-go system has promised benefits
without accumulating assets to pay them. Someone must
pay—the only question is who. If the system is
maintained in its present form, every future generation
must bear below-market returns to service this liability—just
as you would do if you maxed out a credit card and made
minimum monthly payments from now to eternity. If the
transfers from young to elderly are scaled back, on
the other hand, current generations must bear a large
transition cost as the burden is repaid—just as
you would do if you paid off the balance on your maxed-out
credit card.
While we might wish it were possible
to pay current benefits in perpetuity without raising
taxes, it is impossible to do so. This is the reality
that must be faced.
“Why should I care about
posterity?” comedian Groucho Marx once asked.
“What’s posterity ever done for me?”
While obviously meant in jest, Groucho’s question
captured the essence of the tough choice we face today.
Simply put, we must decide whether to sacrifice for
the sake of posterity. Time will tell how we respond
to this challenge.
The only certainty is that there
is no free lunch.
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Jason L. Saving |
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Alan D. Viard |
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| About
the Authors
Saving is a senior
economist and Viard is a senior economist
and research officer in the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- For a discussion, see “The Federal
Budget: Developments and Outlook,”
by Alan D. Viard, Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas Southwest Economy,
July/August 2004.
- For a recent discussion of longevity
projections, see “Social Security
Underestimates Future Life Spans, Critics
Say,” by Robert Pear, New York
Times, December 31, 2004, p. A1.
- “The Truth About Social Security
and Medicare,” by Henry Aaron, Challenge,
vol. 47, May/June 2004, pp. 27–41.
On p. 36, Aaron suggests that costs may
rise more rapidly than assumed. The trustees
assume, as does CBO, that Medicare spending
per beneficiary eventually grows 1 percentage
point per year faster than per capita
GDP. From 1970 to 2003, the actual rate
of “excess” spending growth
was 3 percentage points per year, according
to CBO, The Long-Term Budget Outlook,
December 2003, p. 5.
- The nonhospital part of Medicare is
financed from general revenue.
- 2004 Social Security Trustees Report,
p. 165.
- Strengthening Social Security and
Creating Personal Wealth for All Americans,
by the President’s Commission to
Preserve and Strengthen Social Security,
December 2001, p. 15.
- See The Coming Generational Storm:
What You Need to Know About America’s
Economic Future, by Laurence J. Kotlikoff
and Scott Burns, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT
Press, 2004. On p. 169, authors Kotlikoff
and Burns propose linking Medicare benefits
to wages.
- For a more detailed discussion, see
“Social Security Restructuring:
Tough Decisions Ahead,” by Jason
L. Saving and Alan D. Viard, Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas Southwest Economy,
September/October 2003.
- See How Pension Financing Affects
Returns to Different Generations,
Congressional Budget Office Long-Range
Fiscal Policy Brief No. 12, September
22, 2004, p. 4, and “Generational
Policy,” by Laurence J. Kotlikoff,
in Handbook of Public Economics,
vol. 4, ed. Alan J. Auerbach and Martin
S. Feldstein, Amsterdam: Elsevier Science,
2002, pp. 1884–85.
- Many economists have noted the equivalence
of government debt and pay-as-you-go retirement
systems. For a recent discussion, see
Kotlikoff 2002, pp. 1887–90.
- The fact that privatization does not
offer a free lunch has been noted by many
observers, including Alan Greenspan. See
his statement to the Senate Budget Committee,
reprinted in Federal Reserve Bulletin,
January 1998, pp. 32–35. He also
explained that shifting between debt and
equity offers little or no real economic
gain, even when equity has higher expected
returns than debt.
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Preserving
Social Protections
Many people
believe that scaling back the pay-as-you-go
system would force individuals to
fend for themselves in retirement.
But asking each generation
to save for itself does not mean that
each individual must save
for himself with no assistance from
other members of his generation. The
current system provides various social
protections to low-wage workers, including
more generous benefits relative to
the taxes they pay. A restructured
system could improve returns for future
generations without sacrificing these
protections.
One way (certainly
not the only way) to preserve social
protections while providing better
returns for future generations is
a partial privatization.
Individuals would invest in IRA-like
accounts some of the money that would
otherwise have been transferred to
their parents. All workers would be
required to contribute, would be limited
to diversified investments and would
be required to spread withdrawals
over the course of their retirement
years. The government would make additional
contributions into accounts held by
low-wage workers.
To the
extent that social protections impose
some efficiency costs, such as discouraging
work, the partial privatization described
above would not eliminate those costs.
But it would spare future generations
the below-market returns of the pay-as-you-go
system. These below-market returns
do not occur because of the social
protections, but because each generation
pays for its parents’ retirement
rather than saving for its own. |
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| About
Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed
are those of the authors and should not
be attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited
and a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the
Public Affairs Department, Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas, P.O. Box 655906, Dallas,
TX 75265-5906, or by telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
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