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Report on Social Security delayed
By Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer
April 3, 2010
WASHINGTON - The Obama administration is delaying release of the
annual report on the financial health of Social Security and Medicare
so that the new report can reflect the impact of the recently passed
health care overhaul.
An administration official told The Associated Press that this
year's trustees report will be delayed until June 30, three months
later than it usually comes out.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity before the formal
announcement, said Monday that the delay will allow the government
to determine the impact of the massive overhaul of health care that
President Barack Obama just signed into law.
In January, Richard Foster, the chief actuary for Medicare, estimated
that the Senate bill which passed on Christmas eve would extend
the life of the Medicare hospital trust fund by 10 years. The legislation
that finally passed Congress was the Senate bill but with revisions
approved to win House support.
The administration official said that passage last month of the
health care overhaul legislation had made the trustees report, which
usually comes out around April 1, obsolete. This official said the
decision was made to incorporate all of the changes made by the
legislation to better reflect reality now that Congress has passed
health care overhaul.
The new health care law seeks to guarantee health insurance coverage
for nearly all Americans while cracking down on insurance industry
abuses. It also promises to reduce federal deficits by an estimated
$143 billion over a decade.
The proposal was passed without any Republican votes. The GOP has
vowed to work to repeal the measure and replace it with a less sweeping
proposal that they contend would have the support of a greater number
of Americans who are worried that the Democratic-sponsored plan
will represent massive government intrusion into health care.
Last year's report of the trustees for Social Security and Medicare,
the government's two biggest benefit programs, said that the Social
Security trust fund would be depleted by 2041 and the Medicare trust
fund would be depleted by 2019.
The trustees warned that the financial pressures would begin much
sooner when the programs begin paying out more in benefits each
year than they collect in taxes. Officials with the Congressional
Budget Office say that Social Security will start paying more in
benefits than it collects in payroll taxes this year for the first
time since the 1980s.
Supporters of the new health care overhaul believe it will have
a favorable impact on both Medicare and Social Security, extending
the life of both trust funds.
The benefits would occur in large part through lowering health
costs by expanding the pool of people buying insurance coverage.
For Medicare, that would result in a direct benefit in lower medical
bills while the boost to Social Security would occur in an indirect
way. If employers see their costs for health insurance fall, they
would have more money to spend on employee salaries. Higher salaries
would mean a larger amount of wages that would be subject to the
Social Security payroll tax.
This year's trustees report would represent the most authoritative
estimate on the impact those changes will have on both Medicare
and Social Security.
The report will also estimate the impact the health care overhaul
will have on the premiums that Medicare recipients must pay. Supporters
of the overhaul believe those premium costs will fall.
The estimate that Social Security will pay out more in benefits
this year than it collects in taxes is based on budget data produced
by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. The CBO projects
that because of a recession that cut the number of people working
and paying payroll taxes, Social Security will be paying out more
in benefits this year and for the next three years.
CBO analysts see Social Security returning to small surpluses in
2014 and 2015 before returning to indefinite deficits starting in
2016 under the impact of a rising number of the 78 million baby
boomers retiring.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100405/ap_on_bi_ge/us_trustees_report_7
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