Obama Silent on Social Security
Back in 2013, Obama offered a constructive solution to partially solve Social Security’s shortfalls by using a more accurate measure of inflation—the Chained Consumer Price Index (CPI). Since backtracking on that proposal the very next year, the administration has offered no real solutions for Social Security’s massive shortfalls.
With each year of inaction, reforming Social Security becomes more expensive. Since President Obama was elected, Social Security’s shortfall (for the retirement, or OASI, program only) has almost doubled—from $6.6 trillion
in 2008 to $12.2 trillion
in 2014. (These figures include the 75-year unfunded obligation plus IOUs in the trust fund.)
Not only has Obama ignored Social Security’s shortfalls, but
he made them worse by taking $150 billion from the Social Security Trust Fund to bail out the Disability Insurance program (Obama actually wanted to take $330 billion, but Congress passed a $150 billion “reallocation”). Using Social Security money to pay for disability benefits weakens, instead of strengthens, Social Security for future beneficiaries, who are on track to see automatic benefit cuts of 23 percent by 2034.
Social Security should be returned to its original purpose of preventing poverty among elderly individuals who are unable to work. Some
ways to do that include using the more accurate chained CPI for cost-of-living adjustments, raising the early and full retirement ages gradually and predictably, phasing in a flat benefit targeted to those most in need, and enabling greater private savings.
– Rachel Greszler, Senior Policy Analyst, Economics and Entitlements