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By Thérèse Boudreaux, for The Center Square
(The Center Square) – More than half of the federal budget will go toward benefits for Americans 65 years and older by 2036, and that percentage is set to only grow, a recent congressional report finds.
The Joint Economic Committee’s 2026 report shows that non-interest federal spending on Social Security and Medicare payouts will climb from 45% to 52% over the next decade
“Given long-term demographic forecasts, this increase does not represent a peak, but rather a step in a continued upward trajectory,” the report notes.
In recent years, the U.S. has racked up record-breaking deficits, pushing the national debt past $39 trillion. The federal government is on track to post a $2 trillion deficit for fiscal year 2026, according to the Office of Management and Budget.
Monetary transfers to seniors made up between $350 billion and $520 billion of the federal deficit in 2025, depending on the methodology used to calculate interest payments, JEC found.
“The trajectory of transfers is problematic,” the report adds. “Together, Social Security and Medicare account for roughly two-thirds of the expected nominal growth in non-interest Federal spending over the next three decades.”
Ever-growing federal spending on seniors is not only worsening the nation’s fiscal trajectory but also raises questions regarding the fairness of redistributing the earnings of younger, less established generations to programs supporting retirees, rather than public services for all age demographics.
“Because younger workers generally earn less and rely more heavily on wage income, a larger share of their total tax burden directly funds senior-oriented initiatives,” notes the report. “[O]ver 80 percent of the taxes paid by the bottom 40 percent of households function mostly as direct transfers to seniors.”
Notably, the Social Security Administration has not guaranteed future benefits to Americans who are currently paying into the system.
The amount deducted from workers’ paychecks to subsidize the Social Security and Medicare of current retirees is “a pure and simple tax,” Stephen Goss, former chief actuary of SSA, told U.S. lawmakers in 2024.
Both the Social Security trust fund and Medicare’s hospital insurance trust fund are less than seven years away from insolvency.
Social Security’s depletion will trigger an up to 28% benefit cut across the board, reversing over a decade’s worth of Cost of Living Adjustment increases.
In order for current benefit levels to remain as they are post-insolvency, a median wage earner making $60,000 annually would need to pay an additional $2,600 in annual taxes, according to a Cato Institute analysis.
Both government overspending and demographic trends play a part in hastening the approaching cliff. While U.S. population growth stagnates, America’s 65 years and older population is expected to increase from about 61 million in 2023 to about 77 million by 2035.
By that time, SSA estimates there will be only 2.4 workers contributing to Social Security and Medicare for each beneficiary, “further elevating the level of wealth transferred from younger cohorts to seniors,” per the JEC report.
But if the funding shortfall is not remedied, lower-income seniors will be particularly harmed by the automatic benefit cuts.
“This is an upside-down safety net. When automatic benefit cuts kick in in 2032, the retirees who rely most on Social Security will be hurt the most, while wealthy households will scarcely notice the change,” the Cato Institute’s director of budget policy, Romina Boccia, wrote in a recent piece for the Daily Economy.
“Social Security, if it is to exist at all, should focus on preventing old-age poverty, not provide wealthy retirees with an ever-growing worker-funded annuity layered on top of substantial private savings,” Boccia added.
Rather than increasing taxes on workers or cutting benefits for wealthier seniors, the Republican section of the JEC report posits expanding the contributing workforce as a preferable solution.
“A more immediate approach [to the problem] involves reforming the immigration system to aggressively attract talent in high paying fields experiencing labor shortages,” the authors suggest. “[A]n influx of high-earners would alleviate the mounting pressure on American workers to surrender an ever-increasing share of their income to support seniors.”
Under the current Trump administration, however, increasing immigration of any type is unlikely to happen in the near future.
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Categories: National News









There are no Social Security “benefits.” A benefit is a gift. SS payments are a portion of what was paid to the Fed.
Look at the “SS payments” it’s known as a “Federal Benefit”. The gov uses the CPI for any adjustment which is a farce using corrupted “inflation rate” for any increases. It “averages inflation across many sectors and it becomes an “average” No where is groceries near the CPI. This is something Sanders is proud of. No one gets any interest on “their SS payments”. There is some slow movement to allow interest on that money. Don’t die before getting YOUR money, the gov gets it. But a “benefit” the gov will shell out $250 for your death only to family members. Ya the gov knows how to figure.
Trump hit piece.
Demonization of Social Security retirees who deserve to sit back and do what they worked 50-60 years for. So we were told … The first generation after the war to end all wars… Now our grandchildren are telling us we are stealing their futures.
Talk about entitlement and victimhood…
I remember knowing I knew everything and could judge my elders. Then I became one and wish I had listened instead.
Fear mongering is fear mongering, and sowing division is just that as well.
All just to blame Trump.
Yeah. Trooff I swear.
How about uncovering all of the social security, Medicare and Medicaid fraud in all 50 states and clawing it back! Making all of those who committed fraud to end up in jail and bankruptcy! That would be a good start to making sure these benefits are still around when the millennials, genZ reach retirement age.
SS and Medicare are not benefits, They are payments by “insurance policies” that most of us have been paying since we began working. For me and most of my classmates, that’s almost 60 years of payments. Now we are told … “Oops, we’re going to run out of money, sorry about that.” No, you made a promise, if we paid into the system, the system would take care of us when we got old.
The sad, no I take that back, not sad, the part that torques me off is that none of this is a surprise, at least not to Congress. SS and CMS actuaries have been warning them since the 80’s that this would happen, but except for one small band-aid under Reagan, Congress has done nothing. It seems they preferred kicking the proverbial can down the road to possibly upsetting the voters. Well the can is now at the cliff, and there is no place to kick it, so they’ll try to redefine SS and Medicare to something we are given instead of something we paid good money for.
Maybe after cracking down on those getting payments from Medicare in Wisconsin and Minnesota for care that does not exist, then there may be billions that can be put back into the system.