As shareholders in this democracy, taxpayers deserve transparency in government spending. This year’s USAFacts 10-K report provides something we haven’t seen before as a nation: a local, state, and federal accounting of spending and revenues in the first year of the pandemic.
This 10-K is also a key document to consult given the current debt ceiling debate — a heated discussion that could benefit from some cooler, data-driven perspectives.
Here are some things to keep in mind when looking over the report:
Spending, entitlements, and Social Security
Mandated spending for Medicare, Social Security, and other major federal programs accounted for 75% of federal expenditures in fiscal year 2020.
Social Security, the biggest mandatory spending program of all, was 19% of all federal spending the past fiscal year (or $1.2 trillion). Social Security has a trust fund that is supported by a portion of the payroll tax. Yet the tax only generated $1.1 trillion for Social Security in fiscal year 2022. Social Security old-age and disability benefits are rising faster than incoming revenues; this 10-K notes that the trust fund could be depleted as early as 2031.
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