Alliance for Retired Americans: GOP tax cut lessens Social Security, Medicare dollars

WASHINGTONThe Trump-GOP $1.5 trillion tax cut for corporations and the rich not only gives them a financial windfall. It also lessens the financial future of two programs, Social Security and Medicare, that millions of people rely upon, the head of the Alliance for Retired Americans says.

 

And thats important because the latest report of the trustees of Medicare and Social Security shows the balance in Medicares hospital insurance trust fund in particular is closer to running out than it has been before. That date is now 2026, compared to 2029 in last years report. But tax revenues in 2026 would still cover 90 percent of the hospital funds payments.

 

"The economic growth promised when the tax bill passed is not expected to manifest," Richard Fiesta, Executive Director of the Alliance for Retired Americans, e-mailed. "The GOP policies are hurting the economy, leading to lower overall payroll tax revenue. That reduces the number of years that full Social Security and Medicare benefits can be paid."

 

The key word there, for both Medicare and Social Security is full. When the trust funds are exhausted, yearly payroll tax revenues can still cover most of the two programs expenses, the trustees reported.

 

"The 2017 tax law also repealed the Affordable Care Acts individual mandate, causing millions to lose their health insurance. Many of those people are older Americans who are now forced to seek treatment at hospital emergency rooms, adding to Medicare's expenses," Fiesta warned.

 

Medicares expenses will also increase because Congress barred Medicare which, with Medicaid, pays almost half of U.S. health care costs from negotiating lower prescription drug prices with companies.

 

The trustees three Trump administration Cabinet officers and his director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued the report, but none were around to explain its findings. One of them, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, claimed the growth unleashed by Trumps tax cut, plus higher federal spending, would keep the trust funds for the two big programs solvent.

 

The trustees now projectOld Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance (trust funds)annual cost will exceed total income beginning in 2018 four years earlier than projected in last year's report and continuing throughout the projection period, the trustees wrote about Social Security.

 

If no changes are made, the trust fund reserves would be drawn down until they are

depleted in 2034 the same year as estimated in the last three reports. After trust fund reserve depletion, continuing income would be sufficient to pay 79percent of program cost, declining to 74percent for2092.

 

Fiesta wasnt alone in disagreeing with Mnuchins rosy assessment. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., tweeted his criticism, which was in the same vein: As the Trustees report shows, the #GOPTaxScam is already robbing & weakening Medicare & Social Security to cover tax breaks for the wealthy & biggest corps. Despite @realDonaldTrump's campaign promises, the GOP policies will strip away the benefits Americas seniors earned.

 

Fiesta said, however, that Social Security is solvent enough, as shown by the trustees figures, to argue for a benefit increase. It could be paid for by eliminating the cap on income subject to Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes, he noted. Scrap the cap, is a frequent theme of the programs most-consistent defender, Sen. Bernie Sanders, Ind.-Vt.

 

Social Security becomes a more important part of millions of American families retirement plans every year, Fiesta said. We call on our elected leaders to safeguard and expand Social Security benefits, provide a more accurate formula for cost-of-living adjustments, and lift the cap on earnings for the wealthiest Americans. And he cited wide popular support for expanding benefits, saying 66 percent of voters are more likely to back pro-expansion candidates, while 18 percent are less likely to do so.

Source: PAI