Disaster Social Security is projected to be insolvent a year earlier than previously forecast - LOL Get fucked Gen-X

The financial outlook for Social Security is eroding more quickly than previously expected, as the coronavirus pandemic has drained government revenues and put additional strain on one of the nation’s most important social safety net programs. The overall finances for Medicare, however, are expected to hold steady, though the health program is still forecast to face financial pressure in the coming years.

Annual government reports released on Tuesday on the solvency of the programs underscored the questions about their long-term viability at a time when a wave of baby boomers are retiring and the economy faces ongoing uncertainty as variants of the coronavirus surge. The United States economy already faces soaring federal debt levels in the coming decades, but both Democrats and Republicans have been wary of making significant structural reforms to the popular programs.

“Having strong Social Security and Medicare programs is essential in order to ensure a secure retirement for all Americans, especially for our most vulnerable populations,” Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said in a statement. “The Biden-Harris administration is committed to safeguarding these programs and ensuring they continue to deliver economic security and health care to older Americans.”

Senior administration officials said that the long-term effects of the pandemic on the programs are unclear. The actuaries were forced to make assumptions about how long Covid would continue to cause unusual patterns of hospitalizations and deaths and whether it would contribute to long-term disabilities among survivors.

The Social Security Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund will now be depleted in 2033, a year earlier than previously projected, according to the report. At that time, the trust fund will run out of reserves and the program will be insolvent, with new tax revenues failing to cover scheduled payments. The report estimated that 76 percent of scheduled benefits will be able to be paid out unless Congress changes the rules to allow full payouts.

The Disability Insurance Trust Fund is now expected to be depleted by 2057, which is eight years earlier than previously thought, at which time 91 percent of benefits will be paid.

Medicare’s finances are effectively holding steady. While tax revenue for the Medicare program did decline as a result of the Covid-related recession, Medicare also ended up spending less money than usual last year, as people avoided elective care.

Medicare’s hospital trust fund is projected to be unable to pay all of its bills beginning in 2026. This estimate is similar to those from Medicare’s trustees in recent years. Fixing that gap now could be achieved by increasing the Medicare payroll tax rate from 2.9 percent to 3.67 percent or by reducing Medicare spending by 16 percent each year, the report notes.

But the report highlighted that the official estimate may be unrealistically optimistic. If certain policies set to expire in the next 10 years are extended, or if other expected policy changes occur, the projections would look substantially more worrying.

Long term, the actuaries said they did not think Covid-19 itself would have substantial influence on Medicare spending on hospital care. On the one hand, the death of many vulnerable, older Americans from the virus may reduce future spending they would otherwise have received. On the other, the actuaries expect that some people may have additional health care needs from the syndrome known as long Covid.

Biden’s 2022 Budget

The 2022 fiscal year for the federal government begins on October 1, and President Biden has revealed what he’d like to spend, starting then. But any spending requires approval from both chambers of Congress. Here’s what the plan includes:

Ambitious total spending: President Biden would like the federal government to spend $6 trillion in the 2022 fiscal year, and for total spending to rise to $8.2 trillion by 2031. That would take the United States to its highest sustained levels of federal spending since World War II, while running deficits above $1.3 trillion through the next decade.

Infrastructure plan: The budget outlines the president’s desired first year of investment in his American Jobs Plan, which seeks to fund improvements to roads, bridges, public transit and more with a total of $2.3 trillion over eight years.

Families plan: The budget also addresses the other major spending proposal Biden has already rolled out, his American Families Plan, aimed at bolstering the United States’ social safety net by expanding access to education, reducing the cost of child care and supporting women in the work force.

Mandatory programs: As usual, mandatory spending on programs like Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare make up a significant portion of the proposed budget. They are growing as America’s population ages.

Discretionary spending: Funding for the individual budgets of the agencies and programs under the executive branch would reach around $1.5 trillion in 2022, a 16 percent increase from the previous budget.

How Biden would pay for it: The president would largely fund his agenda by raising taxes on corporations and high earners, which would begin to shrink budget deficits in the 2030s. Administration officials have said tax increases would fully offset the jobs and families plans over the course of 15 years, which the budget request backs up. In the meantime, the budget deficit would remain above $1.3 trillion each year.

The actuaries declined to make any estimates on the effect of Aduhelm, a very expensive Alzheimer’s treatment that was recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The report said that officials were waiting for Medicare to issue guidance on how the drug will be covered before making any calculations. The drug could represent tens of billions of dollars in spending each year.
Democrats in Congress are considering a host of changes to the Medicare program, such as adding new benefits, including coverage for dental, hearing and vision care. While these changes are expected to influence Medicare’s overall finances, none of them are likely to have major effects on the trust fund, which covers only hospital care.

“Medicare trust fund solvency is an incredibly important, longstanding issue, and we are committed to working with Congress to continue building a vibrant, equitable, and sustainable Medicare program,” said Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, the administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

 
I want a time machine to go back to 1948. If that fails, just invent one of those newfangled full dive VR things and send me to 1948 via there instead.
Or a step further like back to 1932 when Franklin Roosevelt arrived with his "New Deal" or 1912 when Woodrow Wilson came with the idea of the Federal Reserve. Imagine a world without the New Deal and the Federal Reserve...
 
>he bought into the retirement account meme
Just move to a poor country like a normal person where you will be upper middle class by default with US dollars

Not a bad idea at all. Being an expat (or even a resident of Bumfuck nowhere like WV) is an effective way to stretch your dollar, and avoid the retards of today's age.
 
  1. Take money from taxpayers without their consent
  2. Pinky swear you'll give it back
  3. Spend most of the money
  4. Use the rest of the money to buy votes
  5. ???
  6. Don't profit!
I can't wait to see what happens when tens of millions of already disaffected gen Xers get told "oops, we actually stole all your money and you're never seeing a dime, later fuckers".
 
I've been waiting for a correction on gold (feel its overvalued) so I've been silver stacking for the past year or two. That being said, I definitely am behind on my gold stockpiling.
fair enough, I just don't put a lot of stock into things like 401k's and Roth IRA's. I make my monthly contributions to my 401k, and thats about it when it comes to stocks/bonds. Gold and silver are real money, and when this pyramid scheme of debt comes crumbling down all the debt people own as their "retirement fund" will get sucked out the windows. Obviously can't know for sure when that will happen, hell it might not happen until I die of old age, but I really don't like participating in the system any more than I have to. You should only participate as much is as necessary IMO, and gold provides a safe hedge against inflation over a wide enough time horizon. Also most 401k's and Roth's barely if ever beat inflation over the same time horizon.
 
  1. Take money from taxpayers without their consent
  2. Pinky swear you'll give it back
  3. Spend most of the money
  4. Use the rest of the money to buy votes
  5. ???
  6. Don't profit!
I can't wait to see what happens when tens of millions of already disaffected gen Xers get told "oops, we actually stole all your money and you're never seeing a dime, later fuckers".
Most of the entitled fucks will just say "ACKSHULY You can just print more moneeez"
 
Because if there's one thing the Boomers hate more than not being able to be rich, it's their children.

They've ALWAYS fucking hated us because we made them stop being hippies and forced them to get jobs.

It's why as soon as they could they started throwing us into wars, then got mad when we won.

It's why these old ass politicians have held onto power. They despise the idea of Gen-X getting into politics.
Odd considering it's always Millennials that bitch about Boomers. I don't think I've ever seen a Gen-X rip apart a Boomer, but it sounds like they would have more of a reason to.
gen-x-memes-2-1574183298677.png
 
This kinda reminds me of how when I was a kid, adults would sometimes give you bonds, and they always told the kids to save it and when you're an adult, the money on those bonds will increase over time or something to that effect.

That didn't fair so well either.
I am still salty about getting $100 from a science fair in a bond I had to save until 18 that I never saw again. That was a fuckton of money as a kid. Fucking boomers and their stupid bullshit.
 
Odd considering it's always Millennials that bitch about Boomers. I don't think I've ever seen a Gen-X rip apart a Boomer, but it sounds like they would have more of a reason to.
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Oh, I'm sure many late Gen X-ers resent their early Boomer parents, but the majority have/had Silent Generation parents whom are either already dead or in the biggest levers of institutional power (look at Joe Biden, Anthony Fauci, Nancy Pelosi, Klaus Schwab, even that ghoul George Soros.)
 
America had the opportunity to be a country where every child could be free, live in prosperity and peace, and secure a permanent home for their religion and community.
And these people wouldn't let you have that. Never forget that. Never forgive it either.
 
Most of the entitled fucks will just say "ACKSHULY You can just print more moneeez"
They'll say that right up until the government tells them the money's gone and their savings are worthless, at which point it becomes their problem.

Most people have absolute faith in the system until the system fails them. It's what we call a rude awakening. And once you've been awakened rudely it becomes a lot harder to fall back asleep and a lot easier to find the motivation to dust off that old guillotine you've been trying to find a use for.
 
Most of the entitled fucks will just say "ACKSHULY You can just print more moneeez"
Well it's been working so far. Sure the economy might be full of zombie corporations dependent on money printing to live, unemployment might be fucked, gas might be up and CEOs might be giving themselves more and more money instead of investing in their business, but at least you can still buy your candy and McDonalds. Right? Wait-
GCJvvZk.png
 
Just lmao at depending on handouts from the government.

Anyone with half a braincel should have been maxing out their 401k, roth ira, HSA, and other tax deductible accounts by their early 20s. If you waited til 40 then that's on you.
Good idea, can I have back all the money I ever put into SSI, with 5% per-year interest, so that I can put it into my 401k?

Maybe instead of boomers getting my taxes, they should get thrown into a New York nursing home. How's that sound?
 
Doesnt really matter, the DNC has about $5 trillion in green new deal spending they can ram through via reconciliation and seeing the writing on the wall with Biden, I have zero doubts that next year before the midterms they will at least double that, if the 5 tril. doesn't create the wheelbarrows of cash needed for a loaf of bread the uniparty demands. This will of course crash SS because why would serfs need money when everything they need will be provided as long as they grow Bezos' grain.
 
This insolvency will happen faster than they think in this article. As the boomers go into their 80's and 90's, their use will accelerate incredibly.

This is why I told my parents when they retired to keep their corporate healthcare (since once you ditch it, you can't get it back) and not give it up for some Medicare shit. They thought it would b a waste of money, but I was absolutely insistent, and told them if they didn't keep it I'd let them rot in some 4th class nursing home when the time came. They kept it, resenting me the entire time but after seeing the 2026 drop-dead date in more than one place, they actually apologized and told me how happy they are they kept their corpo health insurance.

Being a millennial, I always figured I'd never see shit, so, this doesn't surprise or bother me.

The government entitlement programs were always an intergenerational grift/ponzi scheme. The self-named "Greatest Generation" was the peak because their cohort of kids were larger than them, which was how the grift was supposed to work. However, it's been downhill ever since the Boomers, because Gen-X and the Millennials were smaller than the Boomers, which breaks the grift. The boomers were okay, because they inherited the wealth of the "Greatest Generation" and they will be in severe decline by the time the government entitlement programs are going to really die. Gex-X & the Millennials will bear the brunt of the grift/ponzi schemes failure because they will inherit far less from the Silent Generation and Boomers and the government entitlement programs will be in a state of advance decay since they will have died a long time ago.
 
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