Tuesday, December 16, 2008

"estimated present value of future social insurance program expenditures for all current and future program participants to be $43 trillion."

Shopyield takes a look at the Federal Budget:

"The US Treasury has released the Fiscal Year 2008 Financial Report of the United States Government.

This report details the U.S. government’s current financial position, as well as its short-term and long-term financial outlook… the accrual-based Financial Report includes the cost of operations, the sources used to finance those costs, how much the government owns and owes, and the outlook for its social insurance programs.

From the Treasury release…

~~~~ “It is without question that we face extraordinary challenges in our financial markets and the larger economy,” said OMB Director Jim Nussle. “As a result, the bottom-line budget results in the short-term are sobering. It is imperative to continue to aggressively confront today’s challenges. Functioning markets and a healthy economy will not only help put the federal budget back on a path towards balance, but will position us to take on inevitable future economic challenges, such as the our nation’s biggest budgetary challenge, the entitlement crisis.”

Revenue results in this year’s Financial Report were $2.7 trillion, increasing slightly by $34 billion or just over 1 percent, compared to last year. Total costs were $3.6 trillion, an increase of $.7 trillion or 25 percent compared to last year. Net operating cost increased to $1 trillion, up from last year’s net operating cost of $275.5 billion. The growth in the net operating cost resulted from the economic slowdown, the government’s response to the slowdown, and significant re-estimates of the government’s long-term liabilities for veterans’ disability compensation benefits.

Treasury projected an estimated present value of future social insurance program expenditures for all current and future program participants to be $43 trillion. Over the next two decades, Social Security and Medicare expenditures are projected to increase from their current 8 percent of GDP to about 11 percent. Without reform, the cost of these programs is projected to approach 18 percent of GDP by 2080. Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security accounted for 16 percent of total government expenditures 40 years ago. Today, they comprise 40 percent of all expenditures."

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