Brendan Nyhan

CBPP: Bush’s plan fails on solvency

A preliminary Center on Budget and Policy Priorities analysis of President Bush’s proposals for Social Security shows that the combination of private accounts and progressive indexing would close only 30 percent of the 75-year actuarial deficit, move the date of trust fund exhaustion forward by 11 years, and add trillions to the national debt. Here’s the key table:


Table 1:  Impact on President’s Plan on
Social Security Financing and Solvency

 

Current policy

President’s
sliding-scale benefit reduction, by itself

Sliding-scale benefit
reductions plus the  President’s accounts

Year when Social Security benefits first
exceed receipts

2017

2017

2011

Year of Trust Fund exhaustion

2041

2047

2030

Size of 75-year shortfall, as a percentage
of taxable payroll

-1.92%

-0.78%

-1.34%

Percentage of 75-year shortfall that would
be closed

0%

59%

30%

This about phaseout, not solvency. That much is clear.