| Social 
			Security Board of Trustees: Projected Trust Fund Exhaustion One Year 
			Sooner 
     Send a link to a friend 
			
            
            [June 06, 2011] 
            The 
			Social Security Board of Trustees today released its annual report 
			on the financial health of the Social Security Trust Funds. The 
			combined assets of the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, and 
			Disability Insurance (OASDI) Trust Funds will be exhausted in 2036,  | 
		
            | one year sooner than projected last year. The DI Trust Fund, while 
			unchanged from last year, will be exhausted in 2018 and legislative 
			action will be needed soon. At a minimum, a reallocation of the 
			payroll tax rate between OASI and DI would be necessary, as was done 
			in 1994. The Trustees also project that OASDI program costs will 
			exceed non-interest income in 2011 and will remain higher throughout 
			the remainder of the 75-year period. 
 In the 2011 Annual Report to Congress, the Trustees announced:
 
 · The projected point at which the combined Trust Funds will be 
			exhausted comes in 2036 – one year sooner than projected last year. 
			At that time, there will be sufficient non-interest income coming in 
			to pay about 77 percent of scheduled benefits.
 
			
			 
 · The point at which non-interest income fell below program costs 
			was 2010. Program costs are projected to exceed non-interest income 
			throughout the remainder of the 75-year period.
 
 · The projected actuarial deficit over the 75-year long-range period 
			is 2.22 percent of taxable payroll -- 0.30 percentage point larger 
			than in last year’s report.
 
 · Over the 75-year period, the Trust Funds would require additional 
			revenue equivalent to $6.5 trillion in present value dollars to pay 
			all scheduled benefits.
 
 “The current Trustees Report again reflects what we have long known 
			to be true – we need changes to ensure the long-term solvency of 
			Social Security and to restore younger workers’ confidence in the 
			program,” said Michael J. Astrue, Commissioner of Social Security. 
			“The report also highlights the more near-term shortfall in the 
			Disability Insurance Trust Fund. Our disability programs are 
			complex, and there is a long history of well intended ‘reforms’ 
			causing unintended consequences. The President sent to Congress our 
			Work Incentive Simplification Proposal, which would be a good start 
			for bipartisan debate. I urge the House and Senate to review this 
			proposed legislation carefully and schedule hearings this year.”
 
 [to top of second 
			column]
 
			 | 
 
			Other highlights of the Trustees Report include:
 · Income including interest to the combined OASDI Trust Funds 
			amounted to $781 billion ($637 billion in net contributions, $24 
			billion from taxation of benefits, $117 billion in interest, and $2 
			billion in reimbursements from the General Fund of the Treasury) in 
			2010.
 
 · Total expenditures from the combined OASDI Trust Funds amounted to 
			$713 billion in 2010.
 
 · The assets of the combined OASDI Trust Funds increased by $69 
			billion in 2010 to a total of $2.6 trillion.
 
 · During 2010, an estimated 157 million people had earnings covered 
			by Social Security and paid payroll taxes.
 
 · Social Security paid benefits of $702 billion in calendar year 
			2010. There were about 54 million beneficiaries at the end of the 
			calendar year.
  
			· The cost of $6.5 billion to administer the program in 2010 was a 
			very low 0.9 percent of total expenditures.
 
 · The combined Trust Fund assets earned interest at an effective 
			annual rate of 4.6 percent in 2010.
 
 The Board of Trustees is comprised of six members. Four serve by 
			virtue of their positions with the federal government: Timothy F. 
			Geithner, Secretary of the Treasury and Managing Trustee; Michael J. 
			Astrue, Commissioner of Social Security; Kathleen Sebelius, 
			Secretary of Health and Human Services; and Hilda L. Solis, 
			Secretary of Labor. The two public trustees are Charles P. Blahous, 
			III and Robert D. Reischauer.
 
 The 2011 Trustees Report will be posted at www.socialsecurity.gov/OACT/TR/2011/ 
			by Friday afternoon.
 
 [Text from file received]
 |