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GAO's Walker Calls Clinton Plan Worse Than Doing Nothing
November 11, 1999
The Clinton Administration Social Security plan, according to the GAO Comptroller
General David Walker, "has the same effect on the economy and the federal budget
as a policy of 'No Action' that would simply continue spending and revenue along
it current path... In effect, the President's proposal does not address sustainable
solvency. While it extends the [Trust Fund] by 16 years to 2050, it does this
without substantive reform of the program."
Yet, though the Clinton plan is substantively equivalent to doing nothing,
Walker told the House Ways and Means Committee Tuesday that, "the risk is that
the transfers in the President's proposal would induce an unwarranted complacency
about the financial health of the Social Security program. From a macro perspective,
the critical question is not how much a trust fund has in assets---or solvency--but
whether the government as a whole has the economic capacity to finance benefits
now and in the future--namely sustainability." In other words, rather than fix
Social Security's problems, the Clinton plan merely throws more money at them,
but it is money that will have to be earned and paid by future generations.
"The proposal would not...reform the basic Social Security program in any
way. Rather, [it] seeks to increase the likelihood that projected unified budget
surpluses would be preserved for Social Security and debt reduction."
Walker also questioned the Clinton plan for "double counting" interest payments
to the Trust Fund: "The trust funds already earn interest on their surpluses.
Under the President's current proposal the trust funds will receive, in effect,
a second interest payment... This is simply a grant of future general revenues
to Social Security." Moreover, Walker pointed out, "The transfers would occur
whether or not debt reduction actually takes place..."
"Nothing in [the Clinton] proposal changes the fundamental structural imbalance
in Social Security. The system's cash flow still turns negative in 2014 and
Social Security becomes a draw on the general fund as it redeems its Treasury
securities to pay promised benefits.... If the President's proposal to transfer
interest savings to the OASDI trust funds is adopted, their solvency on paper
is extended, but the structural imbalance will remain. The new Treasury securities
will be redeemed and constitute a new claim on the general fund until they run
out in 2050. Cash to redeem these securities can only come from some combination
of cuts in other spending, increases in taxes, or increases in borrowing from
the public. Absent substantive program reform, our children and grandchildren
will be saddled with a budget heavily burdened by commitments to fund entitlement
programs for the elderly."
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