Analyzing the U.S. Budget by the Numbers
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Transcript Analyzing the U.S. Budget by the Numbers
Robert Ricketts
Frank M. Burke Chair in Taxation
October 2010
Trend Lines: Revenues &
Expenditures 2006-2010
(first 11 months each year)
Revenues
Gross
Change (%)
Expenditures
Gross
Change (%)
2,427,741
Deficit
Gross
Change (%)
2006
2,123,378
304,366
2007
2,282,320
7.49%
2,556,710
5.31%
274,393
-9.85%
2008
2,251,413
-1.35%
2,751,946
7.64%
500,530
82.41%
2009
1,885,483
-16.25%
3,255,999
18.32%
1,370,518
173.81%
2010
1,916,555
1.65%
3,176,150
-2.45%
1,259,597
-8.09%
Source: Monthly Treasury Statements (www.fms.treas.gov/mts/mts.pdf)
Explaining the Deficit:
Change in U.S. Federal Tax Revenues
2008-2009
2008
2009
Change
Percent
Individual Income Taxes
$1,145,700
$915,300
($230,400)
-20.11%
Corporate Income Taxes
304,430
138,200
(166,230)
-54.6%
Social Security Taxes
900,200
890,900
(9,300)
-1.03%
Unemployment Insurance
39,535
37,431
(2,104)
-5.32%
Estate & Gift Taxes
28,800
23,500
(5,300)
-18.4%
Other (excise, customs, etc)
105,335
99,269
(6,066)
-5.76%
$2,524,000
$2,104,600
($419,400)
-16.62%
Total
Explaining the Deficit
2008-2009 Budget Reconciliation
2008
Percent
Change
2009
Change
2,524,000
2,104,600
(419,400)
-16.62%
HHS (Medicare, Medicaid)
653,924
729,621
75,697
+11.58%
Dep’t of the Treasury (TARP)
534,707
708,546
174,839
+32.51%
Social Security Administration
605,668
666,314
60,646
+10.01%
Dep’t of Defense (Iraq, Afghanistan)
542,656
576,443
33,787
+6.23%
Dep’t of Labor (unemployment)
53,313
123,474
70,161
+131.6%
Dep’t of Agriculture (food stamps)
84,515
105,276
20,761
+24.56%
HUD (FHA losses)
45,675
57,983
12,308
+26.95%
Homeland Security
(disaster relief, border patrol)
36,515
47,344
10,829
+29.66%
Defense Civil Programs (Military Ret.)
41,909
52,374
10,465
+24.97%
383,718
450,825
67,107
+17.49%
(458,600)
(1,413,600)
(955,000)
208.24%
Tax Revenues (previous slide)
Expenditures:
All other
Deficit
Present Value of “Social Insurance”
Liabilities Projected Over Next 75 Years
“Social Insurance” programs account for just over
40% of the budget
As of the end of fiscal year 2009, the estimated net
present value liability associated with these
programs was $45 trillion:
Medicare – $38 trillion**
SS – $7.6 trillion
2009 GDP = $14.265 trillion
Source: Fiscal Year 2009 Financial Report of the United States, p. xiii
(http://www.gao.gov/financial/fy2009/09frusg.pdf)
(before HCR)
Present Value of “Social Insurance”
Liabilities (cont)
PV of Projected GDP over next 75 years = $776 T
Net PV excess “Social Insurance” expenditures –
5.8% projected PV GDP
Social Security deficit – 1% GDP over next 75
years
Medicare deficit – 4.8% GDP over next 75 years
Medicare shortfall is almost 500% of SS
shortfall in relative terms (as of FYE 2009)
Overview
Social Security as of FYE 2009
Total Beneficiaries – 53 million
Retirees – 36 million
Survivors – 6 million
Disabled workers – 10 million
Employees paying into system – 136 million
Source: 2010 Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Federal Disability Insurance
Trust Funds (www.ssa.gov/OACT/TR/2010/index.html)
Overview (cont)
Total Revenues – $807 billion
Taxes (12.4% taxable payroll) – $689
billion
Interest ($2.5 trillion in Treasury
bonds) – $118 billion
Total Expenditures – $686 billion
Source: 2010 Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Federal Disability
Insurance Trust Funds (www.ssa.gov/OACT/TR/2010/index.html) . Note that figures do not tie to CBO’s historical
figures (www.cbo.gov/budget/budget.cfm).
Social Security Surpluses vs. Operating
Deficit
1990-2009
It has not always been this way …
The cumulative Social Security surplus for the period
1990—2009 was $2.5 trillion
This represents around 23% of the total government debt
($11 Trillion) as of the end of fiscal year 2009
Annual Cost of SS Benefits
2009 – benefits paid = 4.8% of GDP
2009 – SS tax revenues = 5.76% of
GDP
2035 – projected benefits = 6.1% of
GDP
After 2035, costs projected to
decline to 5.9 % of GDP
“Fixing” Social Security
Cost Factors:
Retirement age
Life expectancy
Choice of inflation index (wage inflation is about 30% less
than CPI)
Revenue Factors:
Tax rate
Tax base
Earnings ceiling
S corp pass-through income
“Carried interest” (e.g., hedge fund manager salaries)
Immigration
Taxation of benefits to recipients
Example: Lifting the Earnings Cap?
In 2007 (most recent data available), eliminating
the cap on wages subject to FICA taxes would have
increased tax revenues by $312 billion (enough to
eliminate the 2008 total budget deficit)
Eliminating FICA on the first 20,000 of wages that
year would have cost $69 billion in lost revenue
Thus, we could have increased tax revenues in
2007 by about $243 billion by eliminating FICA on
the first $20,000 of wages, and eliminating the
earnings cap on wages subject to FICA
SSA Projections
Annual cost rate:
2010
– 13.09% of “taxable payroll”
2035 – 17.43% of “taxable payroll”
Current tax rate (combined) – 15.3% of
“taxable payroll”
SSA Projections
For 75-year projection period, the shortfall in SS could
be eliminated by:
Immediately
Increasing
reducing benefits by 12%
.
combined tax rate immediately by 1 84%
This
would absorb about 5.9% of projected real wage
growth over next 30 years
Note that rate increases over the past 30 years absorbed
6.8% of real wage growth
SS
Trustees Report for 2010 projects average real
wage in 30 years will be 48.7% higher than today
Overview 2010 Medicare Trustees
Report
Outlook “substantially” improved as a
result of HCR:
HI Trust Fund solvency extended 12 years
to 2029
75-year HI shortfall reduced to 0.66% of
“taxable payroll” vs. 3.88% in 2009
Note that taxable payroll is different for
Medicare than for Social Security
How HCR Reduces Projected
Medicare Shortfall
Medicare reimbursement inflation
adjustment:
Reduced to rate of “total economy multifactor
productivity growth”
Does not apply to physicians’ services or drugs
Rationale: future growth in healthcare costs
will not be allowed to exceed productivity
growth in broader economy
Medicare Trustee Projections
Hospital Insurance Trust Fund (HI) Deficit
0.66% of “taxable payroll”
Note that there is no earnings ceiling on Medicare
payroll tax
Beginning in 2029, dedicated revenues projected to be
equal to 85% of HI costs and will decline slowly from
there
Over 75 years, HI shortfall projected to be equal to:
23% of Medicare payroll taxes
16% of HI program costs
Medicare Trustee Projections
Medicare, Part B (SMI) – pays doctors’ bills
and other outpatient expenses
Medicare, Part D – pays for prescription
drugs
Combined cost = 1.9% of GDP in 2009
Projected cost 2040: 3.5% of GDP
We have more work to do with regard to
controlling prices for prescription drugs
Immediate Issue: Should we Extend the
2001-2003 Tax Cuts?
CBO Budget Projections if Tax Cuts Expire and HCR Unchanged
Extending the
2001-2003 Tax Cuts
CBO Projections Assuming Tax Cuts will be Extended
and HCR Reforms will not be Fully Implemented
Gouging the Rich?
Comparing effective total (state & federal) tax rates:
Source IRS 2008 individual income tax returns
All itemizers
Itemized deductions claimed for sales, property, state
income and other taxes
Total federal income tax paid, including AMT, after
allowable tax credits
FICA taxes paid conservatively estimated based on
total salaries reported, assuming two workers with
equal pay.
Effective Total Tax Rates
Local, State & Federal (incl. FICA)
U.S.
Itemizers
Bottom
90%
$200,000
and above
Top 1%
Adjusted Gross
Income
Pct of
Itemizers
Share
of AGI
Zero to $25,000
$25,000 to $50,000
$50,000 to $75,000
$75,000 to $100,000
$100,000 to $200,000
Cumulative Total
9.23%
20.15%
20.55%
16.70%
24.71%
91.34%
1.19%
6.46%
10.76%
12.20%
27.96%
58.51%
$200,000 to $500,000
$500,000 to $1,000,000
Cumulative Total
6.88%
1.14%
8.02%
16.54%
6.54%
23.08%
$1,000,000 to $1,500,000
$1,500,000 to $2,000,000
$2,000,000 to $5,000,000
$5,000,000 to $10,000,000
$10,000,000 or more
Cumulative Total
0.28%
0.12%
0.17%
0.04%
0.03%
0.64%
2.85%
1.72%
4.37%
2.50%
6.90%
18.41%
Effective
Total Tax
Rate
49.45%
34.43%
32.56%
32.11%
33.52%
34.86%
35.44%
31.75%
34.91%
29.62%
28.55%
27.38%
25.71%
22.95%
28.26%