Saying 'its what people who want to cut social security use' doesn't work here as I used actual observed data while you stuck to projections. Instead of dealing with the observed data you turned to projections which you say are usually wrong. Given that you were presented with observed data and your stated distrust of projections you have completely undermined your own argument.
This is baffling. Do you understand what my argument was? It was that people justifying cuts based on life expectancy was dumb. If you think I undermined that argument by using the very data they were trying to use I don't know what to say other than...no?
And I think you fundamentally misunderstand the nature of what happens when the SS program costs exceed their assets (And I use the exact same definition of assets that both SS and the Fed use when they refer to SS assets).
Social security has assets, but this means nothing from a government standpoint as government liabilities to social security exactly equal social security's assets. I understand exactly what happens then as I've already told you several times.
Do you think if you borrow $100 from your wife your family has suddenly gotten a $100 asset or has there been no change in your net worth?
SS does not have the ability to make changes to payouts or change the amount or source of the assets used to payout promised benefits. If Congress does not act to make changes SS will reduce benefits at the point when expenditures exceed program assets regardless of what form those assets are in. The closer we get to that point the more likely it is to happen. The 'slowing down' I was referring to is slowing down the pace at which we will cross that threshold.
So you're saying that Congress needs to act now because Congress may not act in the future?
I understand exactly what happens when SS costs exceed the 'assets', I'm telling you that you don't actually understand the real problem. Exhausting the trust fund doesn't matter from a practical sense and the issue arises LONG before the 'assets' are exhausted, in fact it happens as soon as expenditures exceed revenues. The assets are just a claim on other government revenues that have to be replaced somehow. Extending or increasing the trust fund just magnifies social security's claims on other programs that still must be funded.
Make the trust fund a kabillion dollars or zero dollars, it doesn't matter. All it represents is a claim on government revenues that will have to be replaced by other means. This is a total government revenue problem, not a social security asset problem.
And I have explained how cutting now means more than zero. Cuts later are undefined and may be more drastic - which is clearly displayed as the default option has more drastic cuts than this proposal. I wonder if perhaps you do not have enough experience working with people who are trying to plan around these eventualities. It certainly means more than 'literally zero' to them as well
You're making the classic mistake of comparing personal revenues to government revenues. It's hard for people to understand that the two are nothing alike.
It all comes down to one very simple fact that once you understand you will see why cutting benefits now to protect the 'trust fund' is silliness: The amount of money the government has to pay retirement benefits, the military, roads, whatever, is the sum total of all tax receipts, plus borrowing. If the government buys its own bonds to put them in a trust fund that doesn't give them more money to spend next year because they are only transacting with themselves. If we cut social security benefits to zero today it would mean nothing as to our capacity to pay them in 2035 and if we doubled them today the same thing would be true.