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Retirement Crisis Looms as Social Security, Medicare, Corporate Pensions Tank

Published 03/22/2024, 05:59 AM

It is long past the time that we face the fact that Social Security” is facing a retirement crisis. In June 2022, we touched on this issue, discussing the stark realities confronting Social Security.

“The program’s payouts have exceeded revenue since 2010, but the recent past is nowhere near as grim as the future. According to the latest annual report by Social Security’s trustees, the gap between promised benefits and future payroll tax revenue has reached a staggering $59.8 trillion. That gap is $6.8 trillion larger than it was just one year earlier. The biggest driver of that move wasn’t Covid-19, but rather a lowering of expected fertility over the coming decades.” – Stark Realities

Note the last sentence.

When President Roosevelt first enacted social security in 1935, the intention was to serve as a safety net for older adults. However, at that time, life expectancy was roughly 60 years. Therefore, the expectation was that participants would not be drawing on social security for very long on an actuarial basis. Furthermore, according to the Social Security Administration, roughly 42 workers contributed to the funding pool for each welfare recipient in 1940.

Of course, given that politicians like to use government coffers to buy votes, additional amendments were added to Social Security to expand participation in the program. This included adding domestic labor in 1950 and widows and orphans in 1956. They lowered the retirement age to 62 in 1961 and increased benefits in 1972. Then politicians added more beneficiaries, from disabled people to immigrants, farmers, railroad workers, firefighters, ministers, federal, state, and local government employees, etc.

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While politicians and voters continued adding more beneficiaries to the welfare program, workers steadily declined. Today, there are barely 2-workers for each beneficiary. As noted by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation:

“Social Security has been a cornerstone of economic security for almost 90 years, but the program is on unsound footing. Social Security’s combined trust funds are projected to be depleted by 2035 — just 13 years from now. A major contributor to the unsustainability of the current Social Security program is that the number of workers contributing to the program is growing more slowly than the number of beneficiaries receiving monthly payments. In 1960, there were 5.1 workers per beneficiary; that ratio has dropped to 2.8 today.”

Covered Workers to OASDI Beneficiaries Ratio

As we will discuss, the collision of demographics and math is coming to the welfare system.

A Massive Shortfall

The new Financial Report of the United States Government (February 2024) estimates that the financial position of Social Security and Medicare are underfunded by roughly $175 Trillion. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellin signed the report, but the chart below details the problem.

Federal Debt and Liabilities

The obvious problem is that the welfare system’s liabilities massively outweigh taxpayers’ ability to fund it. To put this into context, as of Q4-2023, the GDP of the United States was just $22.6 trillion. In that same period, total federal revenues were roughly $4.8 trillion. In other words, if we applied 100% of all federal revenues to Social Security and Medicare, it would take 36.5 years to fill the gap. Of course, that is assuming that nothing changes.

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However, therein lies the actuarial problem.

All pension plans, whether corporate or governmental, rely on certain assumptions to plan for future obligations. Corporate pensions, for example, rely on certain portfolio return assumptions to fund planned employee retirements. Most pension plans assume that portfolios will return 7% a year. However, a vast difference exists between “average returns” and “compound returns” as shown.Average Vs Compound Returns

Social Security, Medicare, and corporate pension plans face a retirement crisis. A shortfall arises if contributions and returns don’t meet expectations or demand increases on the plans.

For example, given real-world return assumptions, pension funds SHOULD lower their return estimates to roughly 3-4% to potentially meet future obligations and maintain some solvency. However, they can’t make such reforms because “plan participants” won’t let them. Why? Because:

  • It would require a 30-40% increase in contributions by plan participants they can not afford.
  • Given many plan participants will retire LONG before 2060, there isn’t enough time to solve the issues and;
  • Any bear market will further impede the pension plan’s ability to meet future obligations without cutting future benefits.

Social Security and Medicare face the same intractable problem. While there is ample warning from the Trustees that there are funding shortfalls to the plans, politicians refuse to make the needed changes and instead keep adding more participants to the rolls.

However, all current actuarial forecasts depend on a steady and predictable pace of age and retirement. But that is not what is currently happening.

A Retirement Crisis In The Making

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The single biggest threat that faces all pension plans is demographics. That single issue can not be fixed as it takes roughly 25 years to grow a taxpayer. So, even if we passed laws today that required all women of birthing age to have a minimum of 4 children over the next 5 years, we would not see any impact for nearly 30 years. However, the problem is running in reverse as fertility rates continue to decline.

Interestingly, researchers from the Center For Sexual Health at Indiana University put forth some hypotheses behind the decline in sexual activity:

  • Less alcohol consumption (not spending time in bars/restaurants)
  • More time on social media and playing video games
  • Lower wages lead to lower rates of romantic relationships
  • Non-heterosexual identities

The apparent problem with less sex and non-heterosexual identities is fewer births.

Fertility Rate in US

No matter how you calculate the numbers, the problem remains the same. Too many obligations and a demographic crisis. As noted by official OECD estimates, the aging of the population relative to the working-age population has already crossed the “point of no return.”

Working Age vs Elderly Population

To compound that situation, there has been a surge in retirees significantly higher than estimates. As noted above, actuarial tables depend on an expected rate of retirees drawing from the system. If that number exceeds those estimates, a funding shortfall increases to provide the required benefits.

Sharp Uptick in Early Retirements

The decline in economic prosperity discussed previously is caused by excessive debt and declining income growth due to productivity increases. Furthermore, the shift from manufacturing to a service-based society will continue to lead to reduced taxable incomes.

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This employment problem is critical.

By 2025, each married couple will pay Social Security retirement benefits for one retiree and their own family’s expenses. Therefore, taxes must rise, and other government services must be cut.

Back in 1966, each employee shouldered $555 of social benefits. Today, each employee has to support more than $18,000 in benefits. The trend is unsustainable unless wages or employment increases dramatically, and based on current trends, such seems unlikely.

The entire social support framework faces an inevitable conclusion where wishful thinking will not change that outcome. The question is whether elected leaders will make needed changes now or later when they are forced upon us.

For now, we continue to “Whistle past the graveyard” of a retirement crisis.

Latest comments

First, if the birth rate is dropping, the number of contributions will decrease, but so will the number of recipients. If the payouts decrease, the economy will see a rapid disinflation as taxes will decrease as money fueling the economy will drop like mad. Medicare payments will be unsustainable and hospitals, laboratories and clinics will close. The rich won't care because they will have hidden their wealth overseas. I will be dead by then..hopefully. May you live in interesting times.
Current retiree ---If citizens expect Social Security to cover expenses, forget it! What I receive barely covers my rent, notwithstanding inflation at all-time high. Glad I socked away some savings to keep me afloat. My advice? --- put as much into the 401K as possible and keep a watchful eye on navigating Bear markets. I was lucky to retire when the market was at its peak. Retiring on a Bear market decreases saved cash potential. Demography methodology? - doesn't account for the increase death of the elderly especially when surviving on less capital with medical proclivity. As for Gov't - the amount of cash collected, I am surprised it can find better income dividend stream, apparently their actuarial accounting is lacking. Learn from the wealthy and hedge funds. Partisan politics? --- now-a-days they just seek to bamboozle voters by fear mongering while pocketing higher salaries without really earning with power obsession. Articles like these don't solved problems, they magnify it.
when G Bush Jr was running for his second term, he wanted to privatize part of SS. At that time he said that SS is making less than one half of one percent interest. Govt was taking the rest. The people responsible for administering SS have voted themselves a different, higher paying plan.
Social Security is a paid into system, not welfare. It's not used for SSI and other programs for financial assistance that support indigent recipients. That being said, modifications are needed to maintain solvency for guaranteed retirement income. An idea I think is worth considering is a developing employer trend towards annuities as an alternative to 401Ks and employer held pensions. A similar approach could benefit Social Security for retirement and disability.
with current rate of inflation. America will be next Argentina. We need cut spending on welfare and unnecessary wars. Increase in legal immigration vs illegal that doesn't pay TAXES
Bay in to Milan Shukla
(Interestingly, researchers from the Center For Sexual Health at Indiana University put forth some hypotheses behind the decline in sexual activity:) Nope, the problem lies with the genetically modified food ????
solution: Ray's retirement age to 100, cut government spending in half, reduce benefits by 25%, privatize social security, raise the social security tax rate to 10% and remove income limit. see, that wasn't hard was it?!
Raise retirement age to 100 so that only very few people can get pension?! and what about the rest of those 70 to 99?! m.oron! They need to raise social security taxes while also raising the retirement age to 70 and also diverting some of the gigantic military funds towards social security.
too many free handouts for ineligible people. stop. you cannot spend your way to prosperity
Bull Butter Tax full Wages for all not just Working class
Sadly, a very likely scenario is that politicians will take 401k funds to pay the populace. Ask Argentinians…
Donald Trump and the test of the wealthy pay no income taxes, yet reap all the benefits of this country. Make them pay their fair share!!!
Problem solved... Thanks Sandra
well ladies and gentlemen Sandra is a uneducated emotionally disturbed Democrat communist the system of tax write-offs was approved by Democrats and Republicans okay
Kevin, before you launch into name- calling, Sandra didn't say wealthy people are breaking the law. She simply pointed out the fact that many of them don't pay taxes. Perhaps the tax laws should be changed to ensure that everyone pays their fair share.
I love how this article makes this information out to be something new and ominous. People have been talking about these issues with Social Security for DECADES! However, every time someone even HINTS at reforming these programs, Democrats lose their everloving minds. “Republicans are trying to GUT Social Security!!” These was a movement to privatized Social Security back in the 80s, allowing future recipients to administer their own retirement plans. However, THAT would have removed power from the hands of politicians. (And removed a key Dem talking point) Fact is, Social Security is DOOMED to fail, no matter what politicians do now. I don’t expect to see a dime of SSI, and I’m only a decade from retirement.
scare tactics work every time...Could be fixed overnight with Tax High wage earners to pay fair share
 Requires changes to the income tax act ... def not overnite ... but ppl can volunteer to pay more !!!   You first !! ...
Largest Ponzi scheme ever created!
Bitcoin
Sorry…did not continue to
Excellent, informative reading. The SS fund would be in much better shape if the Fed govn’t continues to place what has been paid into it- into the Fed’s general spending fund- replacing it with IOU’s that cannot be repaid…
I LOVE this honest analysis! You rock!
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