Los Angeles Times

Surprise! Social Security healthier

- MICHAEL HILTZIK

The crux of the conservati­ve attack on Social Security in recent years has been the claim that the program is on an unbroken path to insolvency. Monday’s release of the Social Security trustees’ annual report knocks a pillar out from under that campaign, for it shows that the program actually got healthier during the last year.

The trustees predicted that the program’s reserves — that is, the trust funds of its retirement and disability components — will be exhausted in 2035. In last year’s report, the trustees pegged that date at 2034. In other words, the trust funds’ exhaustion last year

was 16 years away; this year it’s still 16 years away.

To use a different metric, the cost of making Social Security perfectly solvent has come down. Last year, the trustees projected that it would require an immediate increase in the payroll tax of nearly 2.8 percentage points, bringing the tax to 15.18% (shared by employers and employees), up from the current 12.4%; this year that estimate came down to 2.7 percentage points, bringing the required payroll tax rate to 15.1%.

The trustees also revised their near-term expectatio­ns. Last year’s report, which was based on 2017 statistics, warned that the system would be paying out in benefits more than it took in starting in 2018. The shortfall was projected to be more than $1 billion of the annual program budget of about $1 trillion, and would mount steadily into the limitless future, unless changes were made in benefits or taxes. This year’s report says the program actually was in the black last year, by more than $3 billion, and won’t have to start drawing down its reserves until 2020.

The trustees are Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin, Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, and acting Social Security Commission­er Nancy Berryhill, all of whom serve ex officio. Two seats for appointed public trustees are vacant.

We’ll get to the main reason for the improvemen­t in a moment. But the bottom line is positive. “This year’s trustees report shows that, contrary to conservati­ve propaganda, Social Security is not ‘going bankrupt’ or ‘in peril,’ ” Max Richtman, head of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, said after the report’s release.

These are incrementa­l improvemen­ts, to be sure. But they underscore an important point: Social Security’s fiscal condition is dynamic. It’s dependent on a host of interrelat­ed economic and demographi­c factors, many of which are fundamenta­lly unpredicta­ble even a few years into the future, much less 16 years. Pundits who tell you they know what’s going to happen are blowing smoke.

That’s an argument for being very cautious about imposing irreversib­le costs on Social Security beneficiar­ies now in the name of protecting the program from expenses later. There’s no legitimate rationale for cutting benefits today because the program might be unable to pay 100% of scheduled benefits in 2035; much better to wait and see.

On the other hand, there are legitimate reasons to expand Social Security to make it more relevant to and useful for today’s working Americans. Two Democratic measures to do so are on the table in Congress. They’re the Social Security 2100 Act, introduced by Rep. John B. Larson (D-Conn.), and the Social Security Expansion Act, filed by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a candidate for president, and Rep. Peter A. DeFazio (DOre).

Both bills would strengthen Social Security by increasing the payroll tax on the wealthy, who get away with paying an unwarrante­d low tax rate. The payroll tax covers only wage income up to a cap ($132,900 this year); the bills would remove the cap over time; Larson’s bill also would incrementa­lly increase the tax rate.

Both would increase Social Security benefits, especially for lower-income workers. And they would enhance annual cost-ofliving increases by tying them to an inflation index that better reflects the living costs experience­d by seniors than the currently used consumer price index for urban workers.

That brings us to why the program’s fiscal status improved. The chief reason is that disability claims and awards have fallen sharply, and more than anticipate­d. Consequent­ly, the disability insurance trust fund’s exhaustion date has been moved to 2052 from 2032 in last year’s trustees report.

The trustees observe that “disability applicatio­ns have been declining steadily since 2010, and the total number of disabled-worker beneficiar­ies in current payment status has been falling since 2014.” They’ve now incorporat­ed those trends in their projection­s. That’s a major recalculat­ion, but the trend has been obvious to experts for years.

The reality hasn’t stopped conservati­ves from demonizing the disability program, however. In 2017, Mick Mulvaney, President Trump’s director of the Office of Management and Budget, took a totally uninformed swipe at disability recipients on the CBS news program “Face the Nation” while its host, John Dickerson, sat mutely by.

Mulvaney called disability the fastest-growing program, which was absolutely wrong — it was shrinking by then.

But Mulvaney was in good Republican company. These attacks were abetted by inept and inaccurate reporting by NPR, the Wall Street Journal and “Face the Nation’s” sister CBS program, “60 Minutes,” which all posited nefarious causes for the pre-2010 rise in disability cases — malingerin­g by claimants, corruption by officials and overly tolerant standards — all of which either had an insignific­ant effect on the caseload or were just false.

michael.hiltzik @latimes.com

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 ?? Alex Wong Getty Images ?? REP. JOHN B. LARSON (D-Conn.) has introduced the Social Security 2100 Act. It aims to strengthen the program by increasing the payroll tax on the wealthy.
Alex Wong Getty Images REP. JOHN B. LARSON (D-Conn.) has introduced the Social Security 2100 Act. It aims to strengthen the program by increasing the payroll tax on the wealthy.

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