Social Security cash‑flow projection shows negative balance by 2015 without program restructuring
Social Security cash‑flow projection shows negative balance by 2015 without program restructuring The passage provides a generic financial projection for Social Security with no specific individuals, transactions, or actionable leads. It lacks concrete names, dates, or connections to powerful actors, making it low‑value for investigative follow‑up. Key insights: Expense growth (26%) outpaces ability to pay (3%) according to the author.; Projection suggests Social Security cash flow turns negative by 2015.; Recommendation that full benefit age should rise from 67 to 72 to align costs with revenues.
Summary
Social Security cash‑flow projection shows negative balance by 2015 without program restructuring The passage provides a generic financial projection for Social Security with no specific individuals, transactions, or actionable leads. It lacks concrete names, dates, or connections to powerful actors, making it low‑value for investigative follow‑up. Key insights: Expense growth (26%) outpaces ability to pay (3%) according to the author.; Projection suggests Social Security cash flow turns negative by 2015.; Recommendation that full benefit age should rise from 67 to 72 to align costs with revenues.
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