(Interesting how all the idiots at MSNBC have identified Obama's defense 
of the payroll tax cut as proof of his "leftist" turn.)

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/payroll-tax-cut-raises-worries-about-social-securitys-future-funding/2011/12/28/gIQAVKZOPP_story.html

Payroll tax cut raises worries about Social Security’s future funding
By Jia Lynn Yang, Published: December 29

By extending the payroll tax cut, Congress and the administration have 
quietly made a critical change in how Social Security is funded — one 
that some in Washington worry could undermine the program’s foundation 
if lawmakers keep renewing the tax break.

For the first time in the program’s history, tens of billions of dollars 
from the government’s general pool of revenue are being funneled to the 
Social Security trust fund to make up for the revenue lost to the tax 
cut. Roughly $110 billion will be automatically shifted from the 
Treasury to the trust fund to cover this year’s cut, according to the 
Social Security Board of Trustees. An additional $19 billion, it is 
estimated, will be necessary to pay for the two-month extension.

The tax cut is supposed to be temporary. But as squabbles over this 
issue and the Bush tax cuts have revealed, short-term tax cuts in 
Washington have a way of sticking around longer than planned, especially 
as economic growth remains slow and lawmakers are wary of raising 
anyone’s tax bill.

The prospect of policymakers continually turning to the payroll tax as a 
way of providing economic stimulus troubles experts, some lawmakers and 
both public trustees of the Social Security trust fund. Their concern: 
that Social Security will lose its status as a protected benefit owed to 
every working American and instead become politically vulnerable, just 
like any other government program.

And as this year’s debate about the nation’s debt showed, nothing is off 
limits to the political brinkmanship that has come to dominate Washington.

“It’s a grave step for Social Security,” said Charles Blahous, one of 
two public trustees for Social Security and a research fellow with the 
Hoover Institution. “It just seems to me the program both financially 
and politically will be on a lot rockier footing.”

Robert Reischauer, the other public trustee and president of the Urban 
Institute, said extending the payroll tax cut another year during high 
unemployment seems justified. But it “could, if it continues for a 
substantial period of time, undermine one of the foundational arguments 
that makes the Social Security program inviolate.”

Since its inception under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Social 
Security program has been premised on a simple contract: Americans pay 
into the program’s trust fund over years of paychecks through the 
payroll tax. In return, when they retire, they receive monthly benefits.

The payroll tax cut changes that. Instead being a protected program with 
its own stream of funding, Social Security, by taking money from general 
revenue, becomes more akin to other government initiatives such as 
Pentagon spending or clean-air regulation — programs that rely on income 
taxes and political jockeying for support.

“All of a sudden Social Security will have to compete with every other 
program, whereas before it had its own dedicated revenue,” said Nancy 
Altman, co-director of Social Security Works, an advocacy group. “It’s 
breaking the kind of firewall that has always existed between the trust 
fund and the operating fund.”

She added: “The biggest concern is that this was done without any 
hearings, without any apparent regard for the impact on Social Security.”

The chief actuary of the Social Security trust fund has affirmed that 
the payroll tax cut will not put a dent in the $2.6 trillion fund, which 
is expected to pay all promised benefits until 2036. The law requires 
the government to make up any shortfalls.

The fund has been built up over time by contributions from the 12.4 
percent payroll tax, of which employees and employers each pay 6.2 
percent. The temporary tax break reduced the share paid by employees by 
2 percentage points.

Altman said that the tax had never been reduced before, and the most it 
has been raised at any time is 0.5 percentage points.

“We’ve never really monkeyed around with Social Security before,” said 
Blahous. “Until now it was understood the payroll tax was supposed to do 
one thing. It wasn’t supposed to be a stimulus mechanism. Now the 
payroll tax is this variable thing that goes up and down according to 
other economic conditions. That is a real transformation of what that 
money is supposed to do.”

The pressure to cut the tax came from the country’s slow-growing 
economy. Last December, Republican lawmakers fought to extend the George 
W. Bush tax cuts, which were about to expire, while the White House 
pushed for a tax credit called Making Work Pay. Their compromise: a 
two-year extension of the Bush tax cuts, a year of extended unemployment 
benefits and a one-year payroll tax cut that effectively replaced 
Obama’s tax credit idea.

Last year’s payroll tax cut saved the average U.S. household more than 
$900, according to the Tax Policy Center.

During the fight earlier this month, Democrats borrowed from the 
Republican playbook, arguing that reverting to the old rate would be a 
tax hike. And economists worried that allowing the cut to expire would 
dampen economic growth in 2012 by as much as two-thirds of a percentage 
point.

The payroll tax cut could be here to stay for a while. Senate Majority 
Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) has said he will appoint a conference 
committee to search for ways to extend the two-month cut for all of 2012.

Blahous said Social Security will be facing enough financial pressures 
in the years to come without the payroll tax cut complicating matters.

This year, the Social Security system projects that it will pay out $46 
billion more in benefits than it will collect in cash. It made up for 
the shortfall by redeeming Treasury bonds bought in years when there 
were cash surpluses.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, including Sen. Bernie Sanders 
(I-Vt.), Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) and dozens of House Democrats, have 
expressed concerns about the impact of the payroll tax cut on Social 
Security.

“Whether you’re on the left or the right, you should really dislike 
this,” said Blahous. “It has been somewhat mystifying, the determination 
to do this. I just think it’s shortsightedness.”

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