• In 2010 for the first time, the Social Security program began paying out more benefits than it is taking in revenues, so it is on course for bankruptcy.
• A study by the independent Tax Foundation found that in 2004, 60 percent of American households were receiving more benefits from the government than they were paying in taxes.
• In 2010 that number rose to 70 percent. That means only 3 out of 10 families in this country are fully supporting themselves – and they are supporting or supplementing all the rest of us, too. On our present course, that number is likely to shrink to two or even one out of 10.
• The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office projects our spending will drive our debt to the equivalent of 90 percent of our economy – 90 percent of total GDP – by 2020.
Talk about unsustainable growth!
Insert here the obligatory pro-life note that had we engendered a younger generation large enough to support our generous social welfare programs, we wouldn’t be in this mess. (Thank you, Planned Parenthood.)
Be that as it may, whatever we may think about entitlement programs in the abstract, as a purely practical matter, reality sets a limit – as it did for the Greeks and the Tetis – on what government can deliver, no matter what laws are passed.
Reputable economists on the Left and Right agree (differing only about how soon) collapse will come without change.
Our generation faces a choice. We can accept some changes and cuts in programs now that can save our social programs for everyone in the long run.
Or we can discover the hard way how little actual safety lies in our safety nets – and what then will happen to the poor and disadvantaged?
(Note: a version of this column originally appeared in Faith & Family magazine)
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