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Allan's avatar

1. Spend a disproportionate amount of the budget on medicare and social security

2. Wage earners are taxed and parental benefits are cut to pay for this

3. People feel it's too expensive to have kids

4. The electorate skews older and votes for more spending on medicare and social security

5. And the cycle repeats

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Jeff Rigsby's avatar

It's worth pointing out that the "Social Security cliff" isn't real.

If the system isn't reformed ahead of time and the trust fund runs out, Congress will not vote to make drastic cuts in current benefits. They just won't. They'll vote to use general revenue to cover the shortfall and run up the budget deficit even further.

The trust fund is a meaningless accounting fiction—the federal government is lending money to itself, which makes the balance in the fund both an asset and a liability—so there won't be any macroeconomic impact if that happens. There's no difference between running down the volume of Treasury bonds owned by the fund (which is what the shortfall does before exhaustion) and running up the volume of Treasury bonds owned by private investors (which is what it would do after exhaustion).

The reality is that Social Security funding is a long-term problem which gets gradually and continuously worse as long as you don't fix it. There may be a sudden crisis at some point if the ratio of federal debt to GDP becomes visibly unsustainable, but exhaustion of the trust fund isn't a crisis point.

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