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Few on Capitol Hill are suggesting that the federal government won't make good on its IOUs to Social Security. But now that it is time to start repaying Social Security, Lew's decade-old analysis of where the money will come from still holds true. "The only way those bonds are redeemed is out of current income, and Social Security is cash negative today," said Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., chairman of the Senate Budget Committee. Advocates for Social Security say the program is being unfairly blamed for the budget deficit, and they worry that benefits could be put on the chopping block. They correctly argue that Social Security did not cause the nation's fiscal problems. For the past 30 years, when Social Security posted big surpluses, the program actually reduced the amount of money the federal government had to borrow on public debt markets. "Blaming Social Security for our deficit is nothing but an ideological attempt to slash benefits and privatize the program," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. The problem, as Lew points out, is that the rest of the government has been running up big budget deficits, including a record $1.5 trillion deficit this year. The national debt now tops $14 trillion, including the $2.6 trillion owed to Social Security. In the short term, Social Security is suffering from a weak economy. Payroll taxes that finance the program are down and applications for benefits are rising because fewer people are working. In the long term, Social Security will be strained by the growing number of baby boomers retiring and applying for benefits. The Social Security trust funds are projected to be drained by 2037 if Congress does not act, according to the trustees who oversee the program. At that point, payroll tax receipts would be enough to pay about 78 percent of benefits. "We can either wait and have huge problems, and it won't be here for my kids and grandkids, or we can address it now, make relatively small changes and make sure that it's going to be safe for the next 75 years," said Erskine Bowles, who served as chief of staff under Clinton and co-chaired the recent deficit commission under Obama. "I think this is all about politics now because I haven't met anybody here on the left or the right that doesn't see the arithmetic."
[Associated
Press;
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