Much of what is commonly being said about the
federal budget – including the causes of the mismatch of revenues and expenditures and the options we
have for resolving that imbalance – is either mischaracterization or flatly
wrong. When you slice through all the heated rhetoric, the budgetary choices we
face may be painful, but they are actually much simpler to make than the debate
would suggest.
While we don’t have a short-term budget deficit
problem, we do have a long-term one that could become relatively serious if not
addressed. It is not that government spending is out of control – we will spend
less in the coming year on actually running the departments and agencies of the
federal government in real per capita terms than we did a quarter century ago
during Ronald Reagan’s last year in office. The problem is the checks the
government sends to people each month and the payments it makes to their health
care providers – what Washington likes to refer to as entitlements.
But entitlement is a highly misleading word if you
really want to know what is going on. We have dozens of federal entitlements
and they go to all kinds of people for all kinds of reasons, ranging from crop
subsidies to student loans to unemployment benefits. While there are a lot of
entitlement programs, only three are big enough and growing fast enough to have
a real impact on the trajectory of government spending. Social Security,
Medicare and Medicaid account for 71 percent of all government spending other
than the third of the budget dedicated to defense and government services and
agencies – so called discretionary funds. Over the past quarter century, these
three major entitlement programs have accounted for more than 100 percent of
the growth in real per capita federal spending and more than 100 percent of the
growth of government as a percentage of the overall economy.
The growth in these programs has been driven
primarily by the aging of the U.S. population. Over the past quarter century
the number of Americans over the age of 65 increased at a rate of half a
million a year. But the big story is what is happening now. Starting in 2011,
the elderly population has begun to grow by a million and a half a year. That’s
three times as quickly as before and it’s a trend that will continue in the
decades to come.
One other fact is worth noting: Over the past 50
years we have brought about a remarkable transformation in the nature of
retirement and the quality of life of our senior citizens. In 1959, more than
30 percent of seniors lived in poverty and only 25 percent had health
insurance. Now, nearly all have health insurance and less than 9 percent live
in poverty, the lowest of any age group. But providing these benefits has
required a substantial commitment by the federal government.
Unfortunately, many seniors still live close to the
edge. The average Social Security monthly check is $1,268, of which about $350
goes to out-of-pocket medical expenses not covered by Medicare. Twenty-five
percent of Social Security beneficiaries have no income other than their
monthly check. Sixty-six percent depend on Social Security for most of their
monthly income.
Given the rapid future growth of our elderly
population, the question is: Can we afford to continue being so generous with
the elderly? Is it time to turn back the clock?
This is where the quality of the budget debate in
Washington really starts to fall apart. Many people say we should attack
entitlement programs in general while protecting retirement benefits. But
there’s simply very little in non-discretionary spending to cut besides
retirement benefits. Apart from the 71 percent of non-discretionary funds going
for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, 12 percent is dedicated to federal
military and civilian retirement and veteran pension accounts. Interest on the
national debt accounts for another 10 percent, leaving only 7 percent for
dozens of other non-retirement related entitlements. What’s more, the
Congressional Budget Office projects that outlays for that set of programs are
already likely to shrink in real per capita terms over the coming decade.
Others imply they would address the growth in
benefits for seniors but argue in the same breath we should protect Social
Security benefits. The most prominent example of this approach is the Medicare
“reform” package produced by House Budget Committee Chairman, Paul Ryan (R-WI).
He first inserted that package in the 2012 Budget Resolution, which was adopted
by the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.
The Ryan plan did cut back long-term outlays under
Medicare health insurance for seniors, but it did so at a heavy price to
beneficiaries. CBO estimated that the portion of health expenses that a 65 year
old would have to cover out of pocket under the Ryan proposal would jump from
35 percent today to more than 61 percent during the first year of the Ryan
plan. Expressed in dollar terms, that would reduce the money left from the average
Social Security check to meet expenses other than health care from more than
$900 today to less than $550 during the first year of the Ryan plan. I don’t
believe the majority of Americans will go down Rep. Ryan’s road and it is not
because soft-hearted, free-spending liberals will stop them. It is not about
Washington.
A Pew Research Center poll last year found that by
wide majorities Americans of all age groups believe that government does too
little to help the elderly; fewer than 7 percent in any age group said it did
too much.
So what can the nation do about a projected
imbalance between expenditures and revenues that may push the publicly held
debt, which is now a staggering $11.9 trillion or 75 percent of GDP, to more
than 100 percent of GDP in the coming decades? The answer is simple. Cut the
expenditures that can be cut and raise taxes to pay for the rest.
Recent projections indicate that because of the
growth of our elderly population, government spending will increase to about 25
percent of GDP by the time all of the baby boomers have hit 65. We can and
should attack wasteful or inappropriate spending like the high prices we pay
for drugs under the Medicare program. But in the end all of those savings are
not going to significantly alter the long term trajectory of the budget. In the
end we will need more revenue.
That leads us to perhaps the biggest piece of
misinformation that has been injected into the budget debate in recent decades:
the proposition that raising taxes will be devastating to the nation’s economic
future. There is absolutely no evidence for this either in the history of our
own tax policy or the history of other developed countries, particularly when
you are talking about a relatively small adjustment that would be needed to solve
this particular problem.
We could gradually increase taxes over the next
decade so that each increase would account for only a small fraction of yearly
per capita income growth. That would allow us to increase total federal tax
collection from the projected 20 percent of GDP to around 24 percent, leaving
us as one of the lowest taxed countries in the developed world. But our seniors
would continue to have the essentials necessary for a dignified retirement and
our public debt would fall from the current 74 percent of GDP to less than 58
percent by the end of the next decade.
Compared to the problems this country faced when the
baby boom generation began arriving, the current problem seems almost trivial. In
1946 after World War II, we were faced with discharging 10 million members of
our armed forces (equal to about 25 percent of the labor force at that time)
and reintegrating them into an economy which was heavily dependent on a single
industry – weapons production – that would largely go away. Simultaneously, we
had to deal with a public debt that had snowballed to 110 percent of GDP –
nearly 50 percent bigger as a share of GDP than the debt we have today.
It is not that our problem is so great; it is that
our ability to work toward practical solutions seems to have been greatly
diminished. If we can’t come together and solve this problem it will be a clear
signal that we face a much bigger problem than the nation’s budget – we will
need to grapple with the fact that we can no longer effectively govern ourselves
as a people.
About the author: Scott Lilly is a Senior Fellow at
the Center for American Progress and a former Democratic staff director of the
House Appropriations Committee. This analysis is based on a recent CAP study prepared by Lilly.
This article was published by the Center for
American Progress.
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