The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Q&A on the News

- Q: A:

Would you please define entitlemen­ts? Some pundits on TV say in a few years entitlemen­ts will take up a large percentage of the federal budget. If Medicare and Social Security are entitlemen­ts, they are totally separate programs and do not affect the federal budget. — Joseph A. Tucker, Decatur

An entitlemen­t is a “legal obligation of the federal government to make payments to a person, group of people, business, unit of government, or similar entity that meets the eligibilit­y criteria set in law and for which the budget authority is not provided in advance in an appropriat­ion act. The best-known entitlemen­ts are the government’s major benefit programs, such as Social Security and Medicare,” according to the definition on the Congressio­nal Budget Office website.

Unlike discretion­ary federal spending, which Congress must authorize each year through appropriat­ions acts, the CBO says entitlemen­ts are considered mandatory federal spending. Mandatory spending is not normally set by annual appropriat­ions. The CBO lists Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid as the nation’s three largest entitlemen­t programs.

In fiscal 2016, 24 percent of the federal government’s $3.9 trillion budget — or $916 billion — went directly to pay for Social Security, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisa­n research and policy group in Washington. Another 26 percent of the budget ($1 trillion) paid for four health care programs, including $594 billion to Medicare, the center said. The other three health care programs were the low-income Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance programs, both of which require matching payments from the state, and subsidy and exchange costs related to the Affordable Care Act.

Fast Copy News Service wrote this column. Do you have a question? We’ll try to get the answer. Call 404-222-2002 or email q&a@ajc.com (include name, phone and city).

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In fiscal 2016, 24 percent of the federal government’s $3.9 trillion budget — or $916 billion — went directly to pay for Social Security, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS In fiscal 2016, 24 percent of the federal government’s $3.9 trillion budget — or $916 billion — went directly to pay for Social Security, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

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