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Obama - Need New `Bargain` - Barack Obama is saying that long-term economic recovery won't be achieved unless the government fixes Social Security and Medicare.

These web sites are an attempt to contribute to that process. I'd very much appreciate if you would take a few minutes to review the material on these websites. Any comments, suggestions, criticisms, insights, etc. would be appreciated.

Summary - Faced with courage, honesty, and strength, the economic and financial crisis facing us, is a once in a lifetime opportunity to build a better future for not only ourselves and our children, but all who follow us.

The simultaneous collapse of the housing, commercial real estate, and stock markets is scary and dangerous. Worse, it is well on its way to exposing the failures of three generations of politicians, bureaucrats and corporate executives to provide a solid basis for Federal, state, and corporate guarantee programs. As those failures take place, the current economic crisis will become a political crisis.

They have promised far more health care (Medicare, Medicaid, and health insurance), retirement security (Social Security, Federal military and civilian pensions, state and corporate pension plans, Pension Benefit Guarantees), financial security (Federal Deposit Insurance (FDIC), mortgage guarantees (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac)), then can ever be delivered.

No one will receive all that they were promised, but everyone can come out better than they were. The only positive solution is to give the people of the United States (the voters and taxpayers) direct control over the difficult choices that must be made, both as individuals and at all levels of government.

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Feedback, Fixes, News, and Ideas - The goal of these websites is to be accurate in both the facts and analyses and then to help solve the problems that are presented.

We very much appreciate feedback, fixes, news, and ideas.

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References
Financial Reports of the U.S. Government
Social Security and Medicare Trustees - Annual Reports
U.S. Treasury - The Debt to the Penny
Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities - Updated on 15th
Federal Reserve - Exchange Rates

Broken Promises Sixty Years in the Making  
In his inaugural address, President Barack Obama said, `Today I say to you that the challenges we face are real. They are serious and they are many. They will not be met easily or in a short span of time.`

The crisis the President is referring to has brought to a head problems that have been mounting for almost a century.

The President also has pledged yesterday to shape a new bargain for Social Security and Medicare with the American people. saying that the nation`s long-term economic recovery cannot be attained unless the government finally gets control over its most costly entitlement programs.

Office of Management and Budget Director, Peter Orszag is predicting deficits of $750 billion or so over the next couple of years and steadily exceeding $1 trillion by the end of the next decade.

Obama inaugural, `Those of us who manage the public`s dollars will be held to account — to spend wisely, reform bad habits, and do our business in the light of day — because only then can we restore the vital trust between a people and their government.`

`this crisis has reminded us that without a watchful eye, the market can spin out of control.`

When the managers of public companies do not suffer the same fate or consequences as their shareholders you have a disconnect! When politicians give lip service to understanding the pain of their constituencies but accept huge contributions from the enterprises they are supposed to regulate and oversee creating gargantuan conflicts of interest, you have a great disconnect. Big Disconnect

Make decisions while other bear consequences

Protect Future

Multiple motivations

Inability to impact outcome but suffer consequences

Put control back into hands of those paying bills



Big Disconnect
Big Disconnect - Rewards Leaders - Damages Public
There is a big disconnect between the interests, ambitions, relationships, and world-views of the individuals who work in businesses and governments and the theoretical goals of those entities to serve their customers, stockholders, and the public interest. The workers, especially, the leadership have many incentives to act in ways that benefit them at the cost of long and, sometimes, even short-range damage to the constituencies that they are paid to protect.

Presidents and Congressional leaders have known for 30 years that Federal entitlement spending was out of control and would create the problems that we now face. But to have dealt with those issues would have likely cost them their jobs. So it was in their interest to pass the buck.

Similarly bureaucrats in the SEC didn`t want to take the risk associated with investigating Bernie Madoff.

We often talk about governments, businesses, courts, regulatory agencies, etc. as if they had some existence apart from the individuals who work in them. Of course, they don`t.

To some extent the actions taken by the individuals that make up these and other `entities` are guided and constrained by their rules and, even more, by the culture and traditions. Workers are also heavily influenced by the official and unofficial incentive structures that exist by and around businesses and organizations.

Some businesses are entrepreneurial. They encourage and reward risk-taking and are relatively tolerant of failure. Many businesses and most governmental agencies reward `safe` decisions and punish failure.

While many people remain in one organization for much of their working lives, others, especially the more ambitious, have every intention of moving in order to advance their position.

People`s actions are influenced not only by their perceived self-interest but the full range of human motivations. Many problems result from people`s worldviews, expectations, social networks as well as their desires to promote their own self-image and/or gain power and influence. The Madoff Ponzi scheme illustrates a couple of these points. Many of Madoff`s victims were Jewish. Other similar schemes were the results of contacts within the fundamentalist Christian community, Hatian immigrants, etc. In Madoff`s case, many people would have had the expectation that someone with his background would be `safe.` Others invested because it put them in a group of people that they considered to be `elite.` Those same beliefs and expectations undoubtedly influenced the actions of the people in the Securities and Exchange Commission.

  • Obama Nominees - President Obama`s choice to try to bring about health care reform ran afoul of the president`s campaign to `clean up both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue.` Tom Daschle, the former Democratic Senate majority leader, admitted to not having paid $140,000 in back taxes and requested that his name be withdrawn
  • Stimulus - Alternative Minimum Tax - About $70 billion or % of the so-called stimulus package is a provision that stop about 24 million taxpayers from being hit with the alternative minimum tax (AMT) in 2009.

    The AMT was part of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 and was included to target 155 high-income households that had been eligible for so many tax benefits that they owed little or no income tax under the tax code of the time.

    Because the AMT is not indexed to inflation an increasing number of upper-middle-income taxpayers have been finding themselves subject to this tax.

    As a result, `patching` the AMT is a regular Congressional ritual. Call the current AMT `patch` a tax cut or a `stimulus` is a massive disconnect.

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Federal Entitlement Programs
Aging Work Force - Boomers Hit 60+
As the graph right illustrates, the first of the baby boom generation is entering its 60`s. Those born in 1946 can already take early retirement. In 2011, they will be eligible for Medicare.

As the chart below illustrates, the U.S. and most other large nations will experience a dramatic fall in the ratio between those eligible for retirement and those who are normally in the workforce.

The ratio will fall steadily from a little less than five workers per retiree now to just over 2.5 workers per retiree by 2030.

The situation in Japan is much worse. Japan also had about five workers per retiree in 1990. That ratio is already down to around 3 to 1 and will continue to drop until it reaches around 1.5 to 1 thirty years from now.

As this chart illustrates, the U.S. went through a similar fall beginning around 1950. In order to fund that decrease, payroll tax rates exploded, jumping from 2% to 15.3%.

  • Medicare - $36.2 Trillion - In its Fiscal Year 2008 Financial Report of the United States Government, the GAO shows Medicare to be underfunded by $36.2 trillion.
    • Federal Hospital Insurance (Medicare Part A) - $12.7
    • Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance (Medicare Part B) - $15.7
    • Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance (Medicare Part D) - $7.8

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  • Social Security - $6.6 Trillion - In its Fiscal Year 2008 Financial Report of the United States Government, the GAO shows Social Security to be underfunded by $6.6 trillion.

    Part of the reason for this problem is that early beneficiaries received benefits that were far higher than their payments would have warranted, to the tune of $17 trillion. This estimate was based upon work done by Dean R. Leimer of the Social Security Administration`s Office of Policy, Office of Research, Evaluation, and Statistics.

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  • Social Security - Return on Invement - When the Social Security program became law, the concept was for payroll taxes to fund the long-range future of the program. Taxes collected from current workers were supposed to create a large trust fund that would support future payments.

    That didn`t happen. Instead Congress and the President got the support of current beneficiaries at the expense of those paying into the system.

    Congress delayed scheduled tax increases and moved up the payment of benefits. Benefits were also increased.

    Just as important, as life expectancies increased, either taxes had to be increased, benefits cut, or the retirement age increased. None of those corrective actions were taken.

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  • Disability Insurance (SSDI) - On top of the recipients of Social Security payments are over 7 million people who are paid under Social Security`s Disability Insurance (SSDI) program. These 7 million people comprise over 4.5% of the workforce.

    The SSDI payments are a serious threat to Social Security`s retirement payments because the funds to support the program come from the same payroll taxes that fund the retirement program.

    In 2005, the program`s expenses exceeded the payroll tax revenues. Since then the difference has been made up out of the Federal government`s general revenue.

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  • Medicaid - $16 Trillion - The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services project that Medicaid will grow at around 8% per year from 2007-2017. It currently makes up 15% of the nation`s health care costs.

    The GAO projects that it will consume around 5% of the GDP by 2080, up from around 2% in 2006.

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  • Medicaid - Few Get Most Benefits - As with health care expenditures generally, a relatively small percentage of Medicaid enrollees account from over half of the program`s expenditures.

    According to Kaiser Commission in 2004 over $151 billion was spent on 5% of Medicaid`s enrollees or less than 3 million people

    Just over $110 billion was spent on the remain 54 million people.

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  • Medicaid Long Term Care - The cost of Medicaid`s Long-Term Care program have grown by almost 350% since 1990.

    Currently about 40% of the program`s costs go for long-term care. This growth has largely been the result of the easing of standards to participate in the program by Congress.

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Health Care 
  • Big Problems Ahead - As bad as the projections for Medicare and Medicaid are, ($36.3 and $16 trillion respectively), the Congressional Budget Office is projecting that the situation will be twice as bad ($52 trillion?) for the rest of the health care system.

    Realistically that won't happen. Instead the number of people covered by private health insurance will shrink dramatically.

    Since 2000 the percentage of the population covered by employer-based health care plans has fallen by 5%. During roughly the same time period (1999-2008), the cost to employers and to individuals (co-pays and deductibles) rose almost 120%.

    Layoffs and cut backs by employers are likely to have dropped that number another 2% or 3%.

    The current stimulus plan includes $30 billion to extend Medicaid to the unemployed as well as $87 billion to reduce the state's portion of current Medicaid expenditures. Together those number total amount to almost 15% of the 'stimulus' spending.

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  • Where Does the Money Go? - The breakdown of health care expenditures over the last 10 years has remained relatively stable with hospital and physicians costs amounting to over 50% of the total. The `other` categories `Other Personal Health Care` and `Other Health Spending` account for about 30% of the remaining half.

    Prescription drug costs have risen about 30% (from 6.9% to 10.1%) during the period 1997-2007. That time frame featured the addition of a prescription drug benefit to the Medicare program.

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  • Spending Concentrated - In any given year, health care spending is concentrated among a very few patients. Over 20% of the total spending goes toward the care of just 1% of the population.

    Almost half (47.7%) is spent on just 5% of the population.

    By contrast, it only takes 3% of the total to take care of most of the country (50%).

    Expenditures are also concentrated on five costly conditions. Almost a third of the total expenditures are spent on heart conditions, cancer, trauma care, mental disorders, and pulmonary (lung) conditions. While spending on heart conditions is the highest (8.3%), per patient spending is highest on cancer care.

    When total medical spending for people with these conditions are added together, it accounts for almost half of total medical spending.

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  • Lifestyle Choices - While the number of people that smoke has fallen to below 20%, those classified as either overweight or obese has risen steadily.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), over 33% of the U.S. population is considered obese, while about half that number (16%) of the nation`s children are obese.

    Obesity increases the risk of many diseases and health conditions, including:

    • Coronary heart disease
    • Type 2 diabetes
    • Cancers (endometrial, breast, and colon)
    • Hypertension (high blood pressure)
    • Dyslipidemia (for example, high total cholesterol or high levels of triglycerides)
    • Stroke
    • Liver and Gallbladder disease
    • Sleep apnea and respiratory problems
    • Osteoarthritis (a degeneration of cartilage and its underlying bone within a joint)
    • Gynecological problems (abnormal menses, infertility)

    While the CDC doesn`t list it, a number of studies have shown a link between obesity and mental disorders.

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  • Spending Doesn`t Equal Improved Outcomes - The Congressional Budget Office estimates that about 1/3rd of the $2.2 trillion spent on health care could be saved.

    The CBO found that there was basically no relationship between a quality of care measure and the total spending. Then CBO Director Peter Orszag said, `roughly $700 billion each year goes to health care spending that cannot be shown to improve health outcomes.

    Orszag cites cost differences between the Mayo Clinic and UCLA Medical Center. Costs per Medicare beneficiary during their last six months of life at the Mayo Clinic were $26,000 while the cost at the UCLA Medical Center was almost twice that amount.

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  • Health Care Disconnect - There is a massive disconnect between who pays for health care and who benefits. The result is that all the incentives in the system are designed to raise spending.

    Among the people who pay for health care, but have little direct benefit are employers, employee, and taxpayers. Employers pay for health care through their sponsorship of health insurance for their employees as well as their Medicare matching payments. Since employer health care payments are tax deductible, the taxpayers also are paying a portion of those costs. To an extent, uninsured taxpayers are subsidizing health insurance for employer supported plans.

    Employees support Medicare recipients through the Medicare deduction. They support Medicaid recipients through their income and other tax payments. Finally, they indirectly pay for their own health insurance through lower wages. Finally, they may pay some of their own health care costs, either as partial payment of their health insurance and/or co-pays, deductibles, or other payments.

    Almost all taxpayers support Medicare and Medicaid recipients as well as Federal military and civilian retiree health care.

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Federal Financial Guarantee Programs
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) - The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is a United States government corporation created by the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933.

    The FDIC is currently projected to be guaranteeing deposit of almost $4.5 trillion. To do that it has an estimated reserves of just over $55 billion.

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  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac - Fannie Mae was established in 1938 as a mechanism to make mortgages more available to low-income families. It was added to the Federal Home Mortgage association, a government agency in the wake of the Great Depression in 1938, as part of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal in order to facilitate liquidity within the mortgage market. In 1968, the government converted Fannie Mae into a private shareholder-owned corporation in order to remove its activity from the annual balance sheet of the federal budget.

    Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation) are estimated to have guaranteed about $6 trillion or 50% of the U.S.'s $12 trillion in mortgages.

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  • Federal Debt - The Treasury maintains a web site detailing the `The Debt to the Penny and Who Holds It.` As of January 15th, the total was 6,309,144,617,619.47.

    The Treasury also provides information on ` MAJOR FOREIGN HOLDERS OF TREASURY SECURITIES.` That listing is updated on the 16th of each month but is two months behind. On January 15th, the end of November total was $3,085,900,000.

    Of that amount, China, Japan, and the United Kingdom, in that order, were owed over 50%.

    It is thatChina has $1.9 trillion in foreign reserves. But many analysts expect China to buy less at a time when the United States is trying to sell more.

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Federal Regulatory Programs
State and Local Governments
  • Pensions - In 2006, the Boston Globe reported that state pension plans covered 12.8 million Americans and had assets worth $2.3 trillion. Depending on their asset losses and actual liabilities, the funds could be facing deficits of up to $2 trillion.

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  • State Health Benefits - According to a report from the GAO released in January of 2008, nearly 20 million employees and 7 million retirees and dependents have been promised pension and health benefits.

    State and local retiree benefits are not subject to the strict federal funding requirements that have been applied to private pension plans.

    For state and local governments` retiree health benefits, studies have estimated unfunded liabilities nationwide to be between $600 million and $1.6 trillion.

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Corporate
  • Pensions - According to a report in Time a study by Mercer, the financial consulting firm, the pension funds of the companies in the Standard & Poor`s 1,500 went from having from an estimated 104% (a surplus) of the assets needed to fund their plans to 80% (a deficit), or a loss of around $300 billion.

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  • Health Insurance - The unfunded liabilities of private companies for retiree health benefits is relatively small because the benefit is being cut or eliminated by many companies.

    Among those with relatively large unfunded liabilities for retiree health coverage are IBM at $5.89 billion, Verizon at $22.5 billion and General Motors at $61 billion.

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