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Testimony:

Before the Special Committee on Aging U.S. Senate:

United States General Accounting Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:

Tuesday, July 29, 2003:

Social Security Reform:

Analysis of a Trust Fund Exhaustion Scenario Illustrates the Difficult 
Choices and the Need for Early Action:

Statement of David M. Walker 
Comptroller General of the United States:

GAO-03-1038T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-03-1038T, a testimony for the Special Committee on 
Aging, United States Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study:

Social Security is an important social insurance program affecting 
virtually every American family. It is the foundation of the nation’s 
retirement income system and also provides millions of Americans with 
disability insurance and survivors’ benefits. Over the long term, as 
the baby boom generation retires, Social Security’s financing 
shortfall presents a major program solvency and sustainability 
challenge.

The Chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging asked GAO to 
discuss Social Security’s long-term financing challenges and the 
results of GAO’s analysis of an illustrative “Trust Fund Exhaustion” 
scenario. Under this scenario, benefits are reduced proportionately 
for all beneficiaries by the shortfall in revenues occurring upon 
exhaustion of the combined Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and 
Disability Insurance Trust Funds. This scenario was developed for 
analytic purposes and is not a legal determination of how benefits 
would be paid in the event of trust fund exhaustion. GAO’s analysis 
used the framework it has developed to analyze the implications of 
reform proposals. This framework consists of three criteria: (1) the 
extent to which the proposal achieves sustainable solvency and how it 
would affect the U.S. economy and the federal budget, (2) the balance 
struck between the twin goals of income adequacy and individual 
equity, and (3) how readily changes could be implemented, 
administered, and explained to the public.

What GAO Found:

Although the Trustees’ 2003 intermediate estimates show that the 
combined Social Security Trust Funds will be solvent until 2042, 
program spending will constitute a growing share of the budget and the 
economy much sooner. Within 5 years, the first baby boomers will 
become eligible for Social Security. By 2018, Social Security’s tax 
income is projected to be insufficient to pay currently scheduled 
benefits. This shift from positive to negative cash flow will place 
increased pressure on the federal budget to raise the resources 
necessary to meet the program’s ongoing costs. In the long term, 
Social Security, together with rapidly growing federal health 
programs, will dominate our nation’s fiscal outlook. Absent reform, 
the nation will ultimately have to choose between persistent, 
escalating federal deficits, significant tax increases, and/or 
dramatic budget cuts of unprecedented magnitude. 

The Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario we analyzed dramatically 
illustrates the need for action sooner rather than later. (See Social 
Security Reform: Analysis of a Trust Fund Exhaustion Scenario. GAO-03-
907. Washington, D.C.: July 29, 2003.) Under this scenario, after the 
combined trust funds had been fully depleted, benefit payments would 
be adjusted each year to equal annual tax income. Under this scenario, 
after trust fund exhaustion those receiving benefits would experience 
large and sudden benefit reductions. Additional smaller reductions in 
the following years would result in benefits equal to about two-thirds 
of currently scheduled levels by the end of the 75-year simulation 
period.

The Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario raises significant 
intergenerational equity issues. The timing of the benefit adjustments 
means the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario places a much greater burden 
on younger generations. Lifetime benefits would be reduced much more 
for younger generations. In addition, under the Trust Fund Exhaustion 
scenario, benefits would be adjusted proportionately for all 
recipients, increasing the likelihood of hardship for lower income 
retirees and the disabled, especially those who rely on Social 
Security as their primary or sole source of retirement income. 

Fundamentally, the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario illustrates trade-
offs between achieving sustainable solvency and maintaining benefit 
adequacy. The longer we wait to take action, the sharper these trade-
offs will become. Acting soon would allow changes to be phased in so 
the individuals who are most likely to be affected, namely younger and 
future workers, will have time to adjust their retirement planning 
while helping to avoid related “expectation gaps.” Finally, acting 
soon reduces the likelihood that the Congress will have to choose 
between imposing severe benefit cuts and unfairly burdening future 
generations with the program’s rising costs. 

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee:

Thank you for inviting me here to talk about our nation's Social 
Security program. Social Security not only represents the foundation of 
our retirement income system; it also provides millions of Americans 
with disability insurance and survivors' benefits. As a result, Social 
Security provides benefits that are critical to the current and future 
well-being of tens of millions of Americans. As I have said in 
congressional testimonies over the past several years,[Footnote 1] this 
important program faces both solvency and sustainability challenges in 
the longer term that require our attention today.

Last January, I testified before this Committee on the need for early 
action to reform Social Security.[Footnote 2] That testimony presented 
GAO's analysis of the reform models developed by the President's 
Commission to Strengthen Social Security. Since that time, the Social 
Security Trustees have issued their 2003 report, which showed that the 
program's financial condition remains virtually unchanged since last 
year. Under the Trustees' 2003 intermediate estimates, the actuarial 
balance of the combined trust funds[Footnote 3] over the 75-year period 
deteriorated from last year's estimate of -1.87 percent of taxable 
payroll to this year's estimate of -1.92 percent of taxable payroll. 
The present value of this actuarial deficit is $3.8 trillion over the 
75-year period. Absent legislative action, within 15 years projected 
Social Security outlays will begin to exceed projected tax receipts, 
and by 2042 the combined Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability 
Insurance (OASDI) trust funds are projected to be exhausted. These new 
estimates once more underscore the program's unsustainability as Social 
Security continues to await reform.

Today we are issuing a report you requested using the same criteria and 
framework we used in our report on the Commission reform models to 
analyze the potential effects over the long term if no program reform 
takes place. [Footnote 4] For this analysis, we applied our criteria to 
a scenario in which the Trust Fund reaches exhaustion, after which only 
benefits equal to cash available from program income are paid. The 
scenario illustrates some potential outcomes of a lack of action to 
address the serious imbalance between Social Security's projected 
revenues and the costs of paying currently scheduled benefits.

Before I summarize the findings from this analysis, let me first 
highlight a number of important points in connection with the Social 
Security challenge.

* Focusing on trust fund solvency alone is not sufficient. We need to 
put the program on a path toward sustainable solvency. Trust fund 
solvency is an important concept, but focusing on trust fund solvency 
alone can lead to a false sense of security about the overall condition 
of the Social Security program. The size of the trust fund does not 
tell us whether the program is sustainable--that is, whether the 
government will have the capacity to pay future claims or what else 
will have to be squeezed to pay those claims. Aiming for sustainable 
solvency would increase the chance that future policymakers would not 
have to face these difficult questions on a recurring basis. Estimates 
of what it would take to achieve 75-year trust fund solvency understate 
the extent of the problem because the program's financial imbalance 
gets worse in the 76th and subsequent years.[Footnote 5]

* Social Security reform is part of a broader fiscal and economic 
challenge. If you look ahead in the federal budget, the combined Social 
Security or OASDI program together with the rapidly growing health 
programs (Medicare and Medicaid) will dominate the federal government's 
future fiscal outlook. Under GAO's long-term simulations it continues 
to be the case that these programs increasingly constrain federal 
budgetary flexibility over the next few decades. Absent reform, the 
nation will ultimately have to choose between persistent, escalating 
federal deficits, significant tax increases, and/or dramatic budget 
cuts.

* Solving Social Security's long-term financing problem is more 
important and complex than simply making the numbers add up. Social 
Security is an important and successful social program that affects 
virtually every American family. It currently pays benefits to more 
than 46 million people, including retired workers, disabled workers, 
the spouses and children of retired and disabled workers, and the 
survivors of deceased workers. The number of individuals receiving 
benefits is expected to grow to over 68 million by 2020. The program 
has been highly effective at reducing the incidence of poverty among 
the elderly, and the disability and survivor benefits have been 
critical to the financial well-being of millions of others.

* Acting sooner rather than later would help to ease the difficulty of 
change. As I noted previously, the challenge of facing the imminent and 
daunting budget pressure from Medicare, Medicaid, and OASDI increases 
over time. Social Security will begin to constrain the budget long 
before the trust funds are exhausted in 2042. The program's annual cash 
flow is projected to be negative beginning in 2018. Social Security's 
annual cash deficit will place increasing pressure on the rest of the 
budget to raise the resources necessary to meet the program's costs. 
Waiting until Social Security faces an immediate solvency crisis will 
limit the scope of feasible solutions and could reduce the options to 
only those choices that are the most difficult. It could also 
contribute to further delay the really tough decisions on health 
programs (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid). Acting soon would allow changes to 
be phased in so the individuals who are most likely to be affected, 
namely younger and future workers, will have time to adjust their 
retirement planning while helping to avoid related "expectation gaps." 
It would also help to assure that the "miracle of compounding" works 
for us rather than against us. Finally, acting soon reduces the 
likelihood that the Congress will have to choose between imposing 
severe benefit cuts and unfairly burdening future generations with the 
program's rising costs.

The Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario analyzed in our report[Footnote 6] 
dramatically illustrates the need for action sooner rather than later. 
Under this scenario, once the combined trust funds had been fully 
depleted, benefit payments would be adjusted each year to equal annual 
tax income. [Footnote 7] After trust fund exhaustion, those receiving 
benefits would experience a large and sudden benefit reduction of about 
27 percent (to 73 percent of currently scheduled levels) in 
2039.[Footnote 8] By the end of the 75-year period, smaller reductions 
in successive years after trust fund exhaustion would mean that 
benefits would be about two-thirds of what they would have been under 
current benefit formulas (or 67 percent of currently scheduled levels).

The Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario raises significant intergenerational 
equity issues. The timing of the benefit adjustments means the Trust 
Fund Exhaustion scenario places a much greater burden on younger 
generations. For example, those born in 1955 would receive currently 
scheduled benefits until they reached age 83, while those born in 1985 
would always receive benefits in retirement lower than currently 
scheduled benefits. This means that lifetime benefits would be reduced 
more for younger generations. In addition, under the Trust Fund 
Exhaustion scenario, benefits would be adjusted proportionately for all 
recipients, increasing the likelihood of hardship for lower income 
retirees and the disabled, especially those who rely on Social Security 
as their primary or sole source of retirement income.

As we all know, fixing Social Security is about more than finances. It 
is also about maintaining an adequate safety net for American workers 
against loss of income from retirement, disability, or death. Social 
Security provides a foundation of retirement income for millions of 
Americans and has prevented many former workers and their families from 
living their retirement years in poverty. Proposals to restore the 
long-term financial stability and viability of the Social Security 
system must also be considered in terms of how potential changes affect 
different types of beneficiaries. The Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario 
illustrates trade-offs between the criterion of achieving sustainable 
solvency and the criterion of maintaining benefit adequacy and equity. 
The longer we wait to take action, the sharper these trade-offs will 
become. We need to put the program on a path toward sustainable 
solvency as soon as possible to assure that future policymakers would 
not have to face these difficult questions on a recurring basis.

I hope my testimony will help clarify some of the key issues in the 
debate about how to restructure this critically important program.

Social Security's Long-Term Financing Problem Is Truly Urgent:

Today the Social Security program faces a long-range and fundamental 
financing problem driven largely by known demographic trends. The lack 
of an immediate solvency crisis affects the nature of the challenge, 
but it does not eliminate the need for action. Acting soon reduces the 
likelihood that the Congress will have to choose between imposing 
severe benefit cuts and unfairly burdening future generations with the 
program's rising costs. Acting soon would allow changes to be phased in 
so the individuals who are most likely to be affected, namely younger 
and future workers, will have time to adjust their retirement planning. 
Since there is a great deal of confusion about Social Security's 
current financing arrangements and the nature of its long-term 
financing problem, I would like to spend some time describing the 
nature, timing, and extent of the financing problem.

Demographic Trends Drive Social Security's Long-Term Financing Problem:

As you all know, Social Security has always been largely a pay-as-you-
go system. This means that current workers' taxes pay current retirees' 
benefits. As a result, the relative numbers of workers and 
beneficiaries has a major impact on the program's financial condition. 
This ratio, however, is changing. In 1950, before the Social Security 
system was mature, the ratio was 16.5:1. In the 1960s, the ratio 
averaged 4.2:1. Today it is 3.3:1 and it is expected to drop to around 
2.2:1 by 2030. The retirement of the baby boom generation is not the 
only demographic challenge facing the system. People are retiring early 
and living longer. A falling fertility rate is the other principal 
factor underlying the growth in the elderly's share of the population. 
In the 1960s, the fertility rate was an average of 3 children per 
woman. Today it is a little over 2, and by 2030 it is expected to fall 
to 1.95 --a rate that is below replacement. Taken together, these 
trends threaten the financial solvency and sustainability of this 
important program. (See fig. 1.):

Figure 1: Social Security Workers per Beneficiary:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Projections based on the intermediate assumptions of the 2003 
Trustees' Report.

[End of figure]

The combination of these trends means that labor force growth will 
begin to slow after 2010 and by 2025 is expected to be less than a 
third of what it is today. (See fig. 2.) Relatively fewer workers will 
be available to produce the goods and services that all will consume. 
Without a major increase in productivity, low labor force growth will 
lead to slower growth in the economy and to slower growth of federal 
revenues. This in turn will only accentuate the overall pressure on the 
federal budget.

Figure 2: Labor Force Growth Is Expected to be Negligible by 2050:

[See PDF for image]

Note: GAO analysis based on the intermediate assumptions of The 2003 
Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and 
Survivors Insurance and the Federal Disability Insurance Trust Funds. 
Percentage change is calculated as a centered 5-year moving average.

[End of figure]

This slowing labor force growth is not always recognized as part of the 
Social Security debate. Social Security's retirement eligibility dates 
are often the subject of discussion and debate and can have a direct 
effect on both labor force growth and the condition of the Social 
Security retirement program. However, it is also appropriate to 
consider whether and how changes in pension and/or other government 
policies could encourage longer workforce participation. To the extent 
that people choose to work longer as they live longer, the increase in 
the share of life spent in retirement would be slowed. This could 
improve the finances of Social Security and mitigate the expected 
slowdown in labor force growth.

Social Security's Cash Flow Is Expected To Turn Negative in 2018:

Today, the Social Security Trust Funds take in more in taxes than they 
spend. Largely because of the known demographic trends I have 
described, this situation will change. Although the Trustees' 2003 
intermediate estimates project that the combined Social Security Trust 
Funds will be solvent until 2042,[Footnote 9] program spending will 
constitute a rapidly growing share of the budget and the economy well 
before that date. In 2008, the first baby boomers will become eligible 
for Social Security benefits, and the future costs of serving them are 
already becoming a factor in the Congressional Budget Office's (CBO) 
10-year projections. Under the Trustees' 2003 intermediate estimates, 
Social Security's cash surplus--the difference between program tax 
income and the costs of paying scheduled benefits--will begin a 
permanent decline in 2009. To finance the same level of federal 
spending as in the previous year, additional revenues and/or increased 
borrowing will be needed.

By 2018, Social Security's tax income is projected to be insufficient 
to pay currently scheduled benefits. At that time, Social Security will 
join Medicare's Hospital Insurance Trust Fund (whose outlays are 
projected to begin to exceed revenues in 2013) as a net claimant on the 
rest of the federal budget. The combined OASDI Trust Funds will begin 
drawing on the Treasury to cover the cash shortfall, first relying on 
interest income and eventually drawing down accumulated trust fund 
assets. The Treasury will need to obtain cash for those redeemed 
securities either through increased taxes, and/or spending cuts, and/or 
more borrowing from the public than would have been the case had Social 
Security's cash flow remained positive.[Footnote 10] Neither the 
decline in the cash surpluses nor the cash deficit will affect the 
payment of benefits. The shift from positive to negative cash flow, 
however, will place increased pressure on the federal budget to raise 
the resources necessary to meet the program's ongoing costs.

Figure 3: Social Security's (OASDI) Trust Funds Face Cash Deficits as 
Baby Boomers Retire:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Ultimately, the critical question is not how much a trust fund has in 
assets, but whether the government as a whole can afford the benefits 
in the future and at what cost to other claims on scarce resources. As 
I have said before, the future sustainability of programs is the key 
issue policymakers should address--i.e., the capacity of the economy 
and budget to afford the commitment. Fund solvency can help, but only 
if promoting solvency improves the future sustainability of the 
program.

Decline in Budgetary Flexibility Absent Entitlement Reform:

From the perspective of the federal budget and the economy, the 
challenge posed by the growth in Social Security spending becomes even 
more significant in combination with the more rapid expected growth in 
Medicare and Medicaid spending. This growth in spending on federal 
entitlements for retirees will become increasingly unsustainable over 
the longer term, compounding an ongoing decline in budgetary 
flexibility. Over the past few decades, spending on mandatory programs 
has consumed an ever-increasing share of the federal budget. In 1963, 
prior to the creation of the Medicare and Medicaid programs, spending 
for mandatory programs plus net interest accounted for about 32 percent 
of total federal spending. By 2003, this share had almost doubled to 
approximately 61 percent of the budget. (See fig. 4.):

Figure 4: Federal Spending for Mandatory and Discretionary Programs, 
Fiscal Years 1963, 1983, and 2003:

[See PDF for image]

*Estimate for 2003 includes $41 billion in discretionary spending and 
about $1 billion in mandatory spending for the Iraq war supplemental. 
Includes $11 billion in mandatory spending for the Jobs and Growth Tax 
Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003.

[End of figure]

In much of the last decade, reductions in defense spending helped 
accommodate the growth in these entitlement programs. Even before the 
events of September 11, 2001, however, this ceased to be a viable 
option. Indeed, spending on defense and homeland security will grow as 
we seek to combat new threats to our nation's security.

GAO prepares long-term budget simulations that seek to illustrate the 
likely fiscal consequences of the coming demographic tidal wave and 
rising health care costs. These simulations continue to show that to 
move into the future with no changes in federal retirement and health 
programs is to envision a very different role for the federal 
government. Assuming, for example, that the tax reductions enacted in 
2001 do not sunset and discretionary spending keeps pace with the 
economy, by midcentury federal revenues may only be adequate to pay 
Social Security and interest on the federal debt.[Footnote 11] To 
obtain balance, massive spending cuts, tax increases, or some 
combination of the two would be necessary. (See fig. 5.) Neither 
slowing the growth of discretionary spending nor allowing the tax 
reductions to sunset eliminates the imbalance.

Figure 5: Composition of Spending as a Share of Gross Domestic Product 
(GDP) Assuming Discretionary Spending Grows with GDP, the 2001 Tax Cuts 
Do Not Sunset, and Payment of Currently Scheduled Social Security 
Benefits:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Assumes currently scheduled Social Security benefits are paid in 
full throughout the simulation period. Social Security and Medicare 
projections are based on the Trustees' 2003 intermediate assumptions.

[End of figure]

Although this figure assumes payment of currently scheduled Social 
Security benefits, the long-term fiscal imbalance would not be 
eliminated even if Social Security benefits were to be limited to 
currently projected trust fund revenues. This is because Medicare (and 
Medicaid)--spending for which is driven by both demographics and rising 
health care costs--present an even greater problem.

This testimony is not about the complexities of Medicare, but it is 
important to note that Medicare presents a much greater, more complex, 
and more urgent fiscal challenge than does Social Security. Medicare 
growth rates reflect not only a burgeoning beneficiary population, but 
also the escalation of health care costs at rates well exceeding 
general rates of inflation. Increases in the number and quality of 
health care services have been fueled by the explosive growth of 
medical technology. Moreover, the actual costs of health care 
consumption are not transparent. Third-party payers generally insulate 
consumers from the cost of health care decisions. These factors and 
others contribute to making Medicare a much greater and more complex 
fiscal challenge than even Social Security. GAO is developing a health 
care framework to help focus additional attention on this important 
area and to help educate key policymakers and the public on the current 
system and related challenges.

Indeed, long-term budget flexibility is about more than Social Security 
and Medicare. While these programs dominate the long-term outlook, they 
are not the only federal programs or activities that bind the future. 
The federal government undertakes a wide range of programs, 
responsibilities, and activities that obligate it to future spending or 
create an expectation for spending. A recent GAO report describes the 
range and measurement of such fiscal exposures--from explicit 
liabilities such as environmental cleanup requirements to the more 
implicit obligations presented by life-cycle costs of capital 
acquisition or disaster assistance.[Footnote 12] Making government fit 
the challenges of the future will require not only dealing with the 
drivers--entitlements for the elderly--but also looking at the range of 
federal activities. A fundamental review of what the federal government 
does and how it does it will be needed.

At the same time it is important to look beyond the federal budget to 
the economy as a whole. Figure 6 shows the total future draw on the 
economy represented by Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Under 
the 2003 Trustees' intermediate estimates and CBO's long-term Medicaid 
estimates, spending for these entitlement programs combined will grow 
to 14 percent of GDP in 2030 from today's 8.4 percent. Taken together, 
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid represent an unsustainable 
burden on future generations.

Figure 6: Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid Spending as a Percent 
of GDP:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Projections based on the intermediate assumptions of the 2003 
Trustees' Reports, CBO's March 2003 short-term Medicaid estimates, and 
CBO's June 2002 long-term Medicaid projections under midrange 
assumptions.

[End of figure]

When Social Security redeems assets to pay benefits, the program will 
constitute a claim on real resources in the future. As a result, taking 
action now to increase the future pool of resources is important. To 
echo Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan, the crucial issue of saving in 
our economy relates to our ability to build an adequate capital stock 
to produce enough goods and services in the future to accommodate both 
retirees and workers in the future.[Footnote 13] The most direct way 
the federal government can raise national saving is by increasing 
government saving, i.e., as the economy returns to a higher growth 
path, a much more balanced and disciplined fiscal policy that 
recognizes our long-term challenges can help provide a strong 
foundation for future economic growth and can enhance future budgetary 
flexibility. In the short term, we need to realize that we are already 
facing a huge fiscal hole (gap). The first thing that we should do is 
stop digging.

Taking action now on Social Security would not only promote increased 
budgetary flexibility in the future and stronger economic growth but 
would also make less dramatic action necessary than if we wait. Some of 
the benefits of early action--and the costs of delay--can be seen in 
figure 7. This compares what it would take to achieve actuarial balance 
at different points in time by either raising payroll taxes or reducing 
benefits.[Footnote 14] If we did nothing until 2042--the year the Trust 
Funds are estimated to be exhausted--achieving actuarial balance would 
require changes in benefits of 31 percent or changes in taxes of 46 
percent. As figure 7 shows, earlier action shrinks the size of the 
adjustment.

Figure 7: Size of Action Needed to Achieve Social Security Solvency:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Based on the intermediate assumptions of the 2003 Trustees' 
Report. The benefit adjustments in this graph represent a one-time, 
permanent change to all existing and future benefits beginning in the 
first year indicated.

[End of figure]

Thus both sustainability concerns and solvency considerations drive us 
to act sooner rather than later. Trust Fund exhaustion may be almost 40 
years away, but the squeeze on the federal budget will begin as the 
baby boom generation starts to retire. Actions taken today can ease 
both these pressures and the pain of future actions. Acting sooner 
rather than later also provides a more reasonable planning horizon for 
future retirees.

Evaluating Social Security Reform Proposals:

As important as financial stability may be for Social Security, it 
cannot be the only consideration. As a former public trustee of Social 
Security and Medicare, I am well aware of the central role these 
programs play in the lives of millions of Americans. Social Security 
remains the foundation of the nation's retirement system. It is also 
much more than just a retirement program; it pays benefits to disabled 
workers and their dependents, spouses and children of retired workers, 
and survivors of deceased workers. Last year, Social Security paid 
almost $454 billion in benefits to more than 46 million people. Since 
its inception, the program has successfully reduced poverty among the 
elderly. In 1959, 35 percent of the elderly were poor. In 2000, about 8 
percent of beneficiaries aged 65 or older were poor, and 48 percent 
would have been poor without Social Security. It is precisely because 
the program is so deeply woven into the fabric of our nation that any 
proposed reform must consider the program in its entirety, rather than 
one aspect alone. Thus, GAO has developed a broad framework for 
evaluating reform proposals that considers not only solvency but other 
aspects of the program as well.

The analytic framework GAO has developed to assess proposals comprises 
three basic criteria:

* the extent to which a proposal achieves sustainable solvency and how 
it would affect the economy and the federal budget;

* the relative balance struck between the goals of individual equity 
and income adequacy; and:

* how readily a proposal could be implemented, administered, and 
explained to the public.

The weight that different policymakers may place on different criteria 
will vary, depending on how they value different attributes. For 
example, if offering individual choice and control is less important 
than maintaining replacement rates for low-income workers, then a 
reform proposal emphasizing adequacy considerations might be preferred. 
As they fashion a comprehensive proposal, however, policymakers will 
ultimately have to balance the relative importance they place on each 
of these criteria.

Financing Sustainable Solvency:

Our sustainable solvency standard encompasses several different ways of 
looking at the Social Security program's financing needs. While 75-year 
actuarial balance is generally used in evaluating the long-term 
financial outlook of the Social Security program and reform proposals, 
it is not sufficient in gauging the program's solvency after the 75th 
year. For example, under the Trustees' intermediate assumptions, each 
year the 75-year actuarial period changes, and a year with a surplus is 
replaced by a new 75th year that has a significant deficit. As a 
result, changes made to restore trust fund solvency only for the 75-
year period can result in future actuarial imbalances almost 
immediately. Reform plans that lead to sustainable solvency would be 
those that consider the broader issues of fiscal sustainability and 
affordability over the long term. Specifically, a standard of 
sustainable solvency also involves looking at (1) the balance between 
program income and cost beyond the 75th year and (2) the share of the 
budget and economy consumed by Social Security spending.

As I have already discussed, reducing the relative future burdens of 
Social Security and health programs is essential to a sustainable 
budget policy for the longer term. It is also critical if we are to 
avoid putting unsupportable financial pressures on future workers. 
Reforming Social Security and federal health programs is essential to 
reclaiming our future fiscal flexibility to address other national 
priorities.

Balancing Adequacy and Equity:

The current Social Security system's benefit structure strikes a 
balance between the goals of retirement income adequacy and individual 
equity. From the beginning, benefits were set in a way that focused 
especially on replacing some portion of workers' preretirement 
earnings. Over time other changes were made that were intended to 
enhance the program's role in helping ensure adequate incomes. 
Retirement income adequacy, therefore, is addressed in part through the 
program's progressive benefit structure, providing proportionately 
larger benefits to lower earners and certain household types, such as 
those with dependents. Individual equity refers to the relationship 
between contributions made and benefits received. This can be thought 
of as the rate of return on individual contributions. Balancing these 
seemingly conflicting objectives through the political process has 
resulted in the design of the current Social Security program and 
should still be taken into account in any proposed reforms.

Policymakers could assess income adequacy, for example, by considering 
the extent to which proposals ensure benefit levels that are adequate 
to protect beneficiaries from poverty and ensure higher replacement 
rates for low-income workers. In addition, policymakers could consider 
the impact of proposed changes on various subpopulations, such as low-
income workers, women, minorities, and people with disabilities. 
Policymakers could assess equity by considering the extent to which 
there are reasonable returns on contributions at a reasonable level of 
risk to the individual, improved intergenerational equity, and 
increased individual choice and control. Differences in how various 
proposals balance each of these goals will help determine which 
proposals will be acceptable to policymakers and the public.

Implementing and Administering Proposed Reforms:

Program complexity makes implementation and administration both more 
difficult and harder to explain to the public. Some degree of 
implementation and administrative complexity arises in virtually all 
proposed changes to Social Security, even those that make incremental 
changes in the already existing structure. However, the greatest 
potential implementation and administrative challenges are associated 
with proposals that would create individual accounts. These include, 
for example, issues concerning the management of the information and 
money flow needed to maintain such a system, the degree of choice and 
flexibility individuals would have over investment options and access 
to their accounts, investment education and transitional efforts, and 
the mechanisms that would be used to pay out benefits upon retirement. 
Harmonizing a system that includes individual accounts with the 
regulatory framework that governs our nation's private pension system 
would also be a complicated endeavor. However, the complexity of 
meshing these systems should be weighed against the potential benefits 
of extending participation in individual accounts to millions of 
workers who currently lack private pension coverage.

Continued public acceptance and confidence in the Social Security 
program require that any reforms and their implications for benefits be 
well understood. This means that the American people must understand 
why change is necessary, what the reforms are, why they are needed, how 
they are to be implemented and administered, and how they will affect 
their own retirement income. All reform proposals will require some 
additional outreach to the public so that future beneficiaries can 
adjust their retirement planning accordingly. The more transparent the 
implementation and administration of reform, and the more carefully 
such reform is phased in, the more likely it will be understood and 
accepted by the American people.

Social Security's Long-Term Financing Shortfall Requires Action Sooner 
Rather Than Later:

As you requested, we applied our criteria to a scenario of Trust Fund 
Exhaustion. This scenario dramatically illustrates the need to take 
action sooner rather than later to address the program's long-term 
fiscal imbalance. Under this scenario, currently scheduled benefits 
would be paid in full until the combined OASDI Trust Funds are 
exhausted. After exhaustion, monthly benefit checks are reduced in 
proportion to the annual shortfall. In effect, after trust fund 
exhaustion, all beneficiaries would experience a sharp drop in 
benefits. Additional reductions in the following years would result in 
benefits equal to about two-thirds of currently scheduled levels by the 
end of the 75-year simulation period. (See fig. 8.):

Figure 8: Change in Currently Scheduled Benefits under the Trust Fund 
Exhaustion Scenario:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

We used our long-term economic model in assessing the Trust Fund 
Exhaustion scenario against the first criterion, that of financing 
sustainable solvency. To examine how the Commission reform models 
balance adequacy and equity concerns, we used the GEMINI model, a 
dynamic microsimulation model for analyzing the lifetime implications 
of Social Security policies for a large sample of people born in the 
same year. Our analysis examined the effects of the reform models for 
the 1955, 1970, and 1985 birth cohorts. For this analysis, as in our 
report on the Commission reform models, we used the 2001 Trustees' 
intermediate assumptions. Under these assumptions, the combined trust 
funds are projected to reach exhaustion in 2038.

Our analysis of the scenario used the same three benchmarks as in our 
January report on the Commission reform models:[Footnote 15]

* The "benefit reduction benchmark" assumes a gradual reduction in the 
currently scheduled Social Security defined benefit beginning with 
those newly eligible for retirement in 2005. Current tax rates are 
maintained.

* The "tax increase benchmark" assumes an increase in the OASDI payroll 
tax beginning in 2002 sufficient to achieve an actuarial balance over 
the 75-year period. Currently scheduled benefits are maintained. 
[Footnote 16]

* The "baseline extended benchmark" is a fiscal policy path developed 
in our earlier long-term model work that assumes payment in full of 
currently scheduled Social Security benefits and no other changes in 
current spending or tax policies. [Footnote 17]

The use of our criteria in evaluating the Trust Fund Exhaustion 
scenario underscores the need to take action sooner rather than later 
to address Social Security's financing shortfall. In so doing, it 
illustrates trade-offs that exist between efforts to achieve 
sustainable solvency for the OASDI Trust Funds and efforts to maintain 
adequate retirement income for current and future beneficiaries.

By definition this scenario would achieve sustainable solvency because 
after the combined trust funds had run out of assets, benefit payments 
would be adjusted each year to equal annual tax income. Before 2038, 
the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario would result in lower unified 
surpluses and higher unified deficits compared to the tax increase 
benchmark by the same amounts as the baseline extended benchmark. 
Subsequently the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario would result in unified 
fiscal results increasingly similar to both the tax increase benchmark 
and the benefit reduction scenario over the 75-year period. Before 
2038, the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario would require the same amounts 
of cash as the tax increase or baseline extended benchmarks; 
subsequently, the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario would require less 
cash each year than any of the three benchmarks.

Under the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario, the effect on benefits would 
differ sharply before and after exhaustion took place. Before 
exhaustion, benefits would be the same as those currently scheduled, 
reflected in both the tax increase and baseline extended benchmarks. 
Once the combined trust funds had run out, benefits for all would be 
reduced across the board and remain below currently scheduled levels. 
Accordingly, those receiving benefits at the time of trust fund 
exhaustion would experience a sharp drop in benefits; under the 
Trustees' 2001 intermediate estimates, this drop is estimated at 27 
percent (to 73 percent of currently scheduled levels) in 2039. Small 
further reductions would need to be taken in successive years such that 
by 2076 benefits would be only two-thirds of currently scheduled levels 
(i.e., to 67 percent of currently scheduled levels). (See fig. 9.):

Figure 9: Monthly Benefits Under the Trust Fund Exhaustion Scenario for 
an Illustrative Individual by Selected Birth Year:

[See PDF for image]

Note: Illustrative workers retire at age 65 and receive benefits equal 
to the median for the appropriate GEMINI cohort under the Trust Fund 
Exhaustion scenario. In years after 2038, real benefits are reduced 
according to the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario. In GEMINI, the median 
age of death for those living to age 65 years and receiving a retired 
workers benefit is 84, 85, and 86, for the 1955, 1970, and 1985 
cohorts, respectively.

[End of figure]

Due to the timing of the reductions under the Trust Fund Exhaustion 
scenario, younger generations would bear greater benefit reductions. 
Those born in 1955 would not experience benefit reductions until they 
reached age 83, while those born in 1985 would receive lower benefits 
than under either GAO's benefit reduction or tax increase benchmarks in 
all years of retirement. Consequently, lifetime benefits would be 
reduced more for younger generations. Under the Trust Fund Exhaustion 
scenario we used, benefits would be adjusted proportionately for all 
recipients, increasing the likelihood of hardship for lower income 
retirees and the disabled.

Given a lack of historical precedent and legislative clarity on how SSA 
would proceed in the event of trust fund exhaustion, the nature and 
scope of SSA's administrative challenges under the scenario are 
difficult to describe or assess. At a minimum, a focus on cash 
management would be needed for SSA to calculate and implement the 
ongoing benefit adjustments required under the scenario.

Conclusion: Choices and Trade-Offs Will Be Part of Any Social Security 
Reform--Acting Soon Would Help:

It is likely that the structural changes required to restore Social 
Security's long-term viability generally will require some combination 
of reductions from currently scheduled benefits, revenue increases, and 
may include the use of some general revenues. The proposals we have 
examined, both this year and earlier, generally reflect this. Proposals 
employ possible benefit modifications within the current program 
structure, including modifying the benefit formula, reconsidering 
current eligibility criteria, and reducing cost-of-living adjustments. 
Revenue increases might take the form of increases in the payroll tax 
rate, expanding coverage to include the relatively few workers who are 
still not covered under Social Security, or allowing the trust funds to 
be invested in potentially higher-yielding securities such as 
stocks.[Footnote 18] Similarly, some proposals rely on general revenue 
transfers to increase the amount of money going towards the Social 
Security program. Reforms that include individual accounts would also 
involve Social Security benefit reductions and/or revenue increases, 
and the use of general revenues. Whatever approach is taken to reform, 
we must be able to continue to finance ongoing benefits to retirees in 
the short term. The longer we delay reform, the larger the "transition 
costs" and the more disruptive the actions will be.

In evaluating Social Security reform proposals, the choice among 
various benefit reductions and revenue increases will affect the 
balance between income adequacy and individual equity. Benefit 
reductions could pose the risk of diminishing adequacy, especially for 
specific subpopulations. Both benefit reductions and tax increases that 
have been proposed could diminish individual equity by reducing the 
implicit rates of return the workers earn on their contributions to the 
system. In contrast, increasing revenues by investing retirement funds 
in the stock market could improve rates of return but potentially 
expose individuals to investment risk and losses of expected retirement 
income.

Similarly, the choice among various benefit reductions and revenue 
increases--for example, raising the retirement age--will ultimately 
determine not just how much income retirees will have but also how long 
they will be expected to continue working and how long their 
retirements will be. Reforms will determine how much consumption 
workers will give up during their working years to provide for more 
consumption during retirement.

The use of our criteria to evaluate approaches to Social Security 
reform highlights the trade-offs that exist between efforts to achieve 
sustainable solvency and to maintain adequate retirement income for 
current and future beneficiaries. These trade-offs can be described as 
differences in the extent and nature of the risks for individuals and 
the nation as a whole.

At the same time, the defined benefit under the current Social Security 
system is also uncertain. The primary risk is that a significant 
funding gap exists between currently scheduled and funded benefits 
which, although it will not occur for a number of years, is significant 
and will grow over time. Other risks stem from uncertainty in, for 
example, future levels of productivity growth, real wage growth, and 
demographics. The Congress has revised Social Security many times in 
the past, and future Congresses could decide to revise benefits in ways 
that leave those affected little time to adjust. As the Congress 
deliberates various approaches to Social Security, the national debate 
also needs to include discussion of the various types of risk implicit 
in each approach and in the timing of reform.

Early action to change these programs would yield the highest fiscal 
dividends for the federal budget and would provide a longer period for 
prospective beneficiaries to make adjustments in their own planning. 
Waiting to build economic resources and reform future claims entails 
risks. First, we lose an important window where today's relatively 
large workforce can increase saving and enhance productivity, two 
elements critical to growing the future economy. We lose the 
opportunity to reduce the burden of interest payments, thereby creating 
a legacy of higher debt as well as elderly entitlement spending for the 
relatively smaller workforce of the future. Most critically, we risk 
losing the opportunity to phase in changes gradually so that all can 
make the adjustments needed in private and public plans to accommodate 
this historic shift. Unfortunately, the long-range challenge has become 
more difficult, and the window of opportunity to address the 
entitlement challenge is narrowing.

As the baby boom generation retires and the numbers of those entitled 
to these retirement benefits grow, the difficulties of reform will be 
compounded. Accordingly, it remains more important than ever to deal 
with these issues over the next several years. In their March 2003 
report, the Trustees emphasized the need for action sooner rather than 
later, stating that the sooner Social Security's financial challenges 
are addressed, the more varied and less disruptive can be their 
solutions.

Today many retirees and near-retirees fear cuts that will affect them 
while young people believe they will get little or no Social Security 
benefits. As I have said before, I believe it is possible to structure 
a Social Security reform proposal that will exceed the expectations of 
all generations of Americans. In my view there is a window of 
opportunity to craft a solution that will protect Social Security 
benefits for the nation's current and near-term retirees, while 
ensuring that the system will be there for future generations. However, 
this window of opportunity will close as the baby boom generation 
begins to retire. As a result, we must move forward to address Social 
Security because we have other major challenges confronting us. The 
fact is, compared to addressing our long-range health care financing 
problem; reforming Social Security will be easy lifting.

It is my hope that we will think about the unprecedented challenge 
facing future generations in our aging society. Relieving them of some 
of the burden of today's financing commitments would help fulfill this 
generation's stewardship responsibility to future generations. It would 
also preserve some capacity for them to make their own choices by 
strengthening both the budget and the economy they inherit. We need to 
act now to address the structural imbalances in Social Security, 
Medicare, and other entitlement programs before the approaching 
demographic tidal wave makes the imbalances more difficult, dramatic, 
and disruptive.

We at GAO look forward to continuing to work with this Committee and 
the Congress in addressing this and other important issues facing our 
nation.

Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee, that concludes my statement. 
I'd be happy to answer any questions you may have.

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FOOTNOTES

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, Social Security: Criteria for 
Evaluating Social Security Reform Proposals, GAO/T-HEHS-99-94 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 25, 1999); Social Security: The President's 
Proposal, GAO/T-HEHS/AIMD-00-43 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 9, 1999); 
Budget Issues: Long-Term Fiscal Challenges, GAO-02-467T (Washington, 
D.C.: Feb. 27, 2002); Social Security: Long-Term Financing Shortfall 
Drives Need for Reform GAO-02-845T (Washington, D.C.: June 19, 2002). 

[2] U.S. General Accounting Office, Social Security: Analysis of Issues 
and Selected Reform Proposals, GAO-3-376T (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 15, 
2003).

[3] In this testimony, the term "trust funds" refers to the combined 
Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance (OASDI) Trust 
Funds.

[4] As in our report on the Commission reform models, we used the 2001 
Trustees' intermediate assumptions in analyzing the Trust Fund 
Exhaustion scenario.

[5] In addition to assessing a proposal's likely effect on Social 
Security's actuarial balance, a standard of sustainable solvency 
involves looking at (1) the balance between program income and cost 
beyond the 75th year and (2) the share of the budget and economy 
consumed by Social Security spending. 

[6] U.S. General Accounting Office, Social Security Reform: Analysis of 
a Trust Fund Exhaustion Scenario, GAO-03-907 (Washington, D.C.: July 
29, 2003).

[7] The Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario is intended as an analytic tool, 
not a legal determination.

[8] In our analysis of the Trust Fund Exhaustion scenario, as in our 
January report on the Commission models, we used the Trustees' 2001 
intermediate assumptions, under which the combined OASDI trust funds 
are projected to reach exhaustion in 2038. Under the 2001 intermediate 
assumptions, in 2038 the benefit reduction would be about 7 percent 
because trust fund assets would be available for part of the year to 
pay benefits. In 2039, the first full year after trust fund exhaustion, 
benefits would fall sharply, to about 27 percent (or 73 percent of 
currently scheduled levels). Under the Trustees' 2003 intermediate 
assumptions, the projected exhaustion date for the combined trust funds 
is 2042, and the overall drop is approximately the same.

[9] Separately, the DI fund is projected to be exhausted in 2028 and 
the OASI fund in 2044. 

[10] If the unified budget is in surplus at this point, then financing 
the excess benefits will require less debt redemption rather than 
increased borrowing. 

[11] This simulation assumes that all currently scheduled benefits 
would be paid in full throughout the 75-year projection period. The 
simulation does not reflect the effects of any legislation enacted 
after March 2003, e.g., the tax reductions in the Jobs and Growth Tax 
Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003.

[12] U.S. General Accounting Office, Fiscal Exposures: Improving the 
Budgetary Focus on Long-Term Costs and Uncertainties, GAO-03-213 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 24, 2003).

[13] Testimony before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban 
Affairs, U.S. Senate, July 24, 2001.

[14] Solvency could also be achieved through a combination of tax and 
benefit actions. This would reduce the magnitude of the required change 
in taxes or benefits compared to making changes exclusively to taxes or 
benefits as shown in figure 7.

[15] From the perspective of analyzing benefit adequacy, the tax 
increase and baseline extended benchmarks are identical because both 
assume payment in full of scheduled Social Security benefits over the 
75-year simulation period.

[16] Our benchmarks are solvent for the 75-year projection period 
commonly used by the Social Security Administration's (SSA) Office of 
the Chief Actuary, but they do not achieve sustainable solvency. Both 
the benefit reduction and tax increase benchmarks are explicitly fully 
funded and we worked closely with SSA's Chief Actuary in their design. 

[17] Implicitly, therefore, after exhaustion benefits are paid in part 
by increased borrowing from the public.

[18] About 4 percent of the workforce remains uncovered, which mostly 
includes some state and local government employees and federal 
employees hired before 1984.

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