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THE SOCIAL INSURANCE CRISIS AND THE PROBLEM OF COLLECTIVE SAVING: A
COMMENTARY ON SHAVIRO'S RECKLESS DISREGARD
David I. Walker
Boston University School of Law Working Paper 05-11
Abstract
Long-range Social Security and Medicare spending projections vastly exceed
projected program revenues. If left unchecked, the resulting fiscal imbalance
(estimated at $40 to $70 trillion in present value terms) would fall primarily
on future generations. To avoid generational inequity, and perhaps fiscal
meltdown, Professor Daniel N. Shaviro and others propose immediate fiscal
austerity. This reply Commentary argues that near-term austerity is unlikely
to play a significant role in overcoming the fiscal imbalance, which can
be thought of as a balloon payment due mid-twenty-first century. Significant
near-term fiscal austerity would eliminate the public debt and replace
it with a public surplus. Political economy theory and U.S. public debt
history suggest that this path is infeasible. This Commentary also stresses
the importance of disaggregating the “Social Security and Medicare”
problems. Contrary to popular belief, Medicare is by far the larger problem,
and the Medicare imbalance is driven by projected spending increases outpacing
overall economic growth indefinitely. These observations suggest that
a focus on Medicare cost control, rather than revenue enhancement, is
called for.
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David I. Walker Contact Information
diwalker@bu.edu
Boston University School of Law
765 Commonwealth Ave
Boston, MA 02215
USA
(617) 353-3174
Presentation and Publication Information:
45 Boston College Law Review 1347 (2005)
Social
Science Research Network
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