In less than a year, Trump erased 12 years of solvency for the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
Recent policy changes and economic shifts have slashed 12 years off the projected life span of the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A, according to a newly updated report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund is now slated to be entirely exhausted by 2040, even though the balance generally increases through 2031, as spending will begin to outstrip income in the following year.

This rapid deterioration of Medicare’s financial solvency represents a stark drop from the CBO’s previous estimate, which was published just last year, in March 2025. The dramatically shortened timeline means future retirees could face significant cuts to vital health care services far sooner than previously anticipated. As required by the Deficit Control Act, CBO Director Phillip Swagel noted the projections reflect the assumption benefits would be paid as scheduled even after the HI trust fund was exhausted.

The primary culprit for this accelerated depletion is a sharp reduction in the fund’s projected income, heavily driven by legislation passed over the last year. Specifically, the 2025 reconciliation act (Public Law 119-21, more commonly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) significantly reduced the revenues the trust fund normally receives from taxing Social Security benefits. This legislation lowered tax rates and established a temporary deduction for taxpayers age 65 or older. Consequently, this major policy shift enacted during the Trump administration has directly contributed to starving the Medicare safety net of critical future funding.





 
Recent policy changes and economic shifts have slashed 12 years off the projected life span of the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A, according to a newly updated report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund is now slated to be entirely exhausted by 2040, even though the balance generally increases through 2031, as spending will begin to outstrip income in the following year.

This rapid deterioration of Medicare’s financial solvency represents a stark drop from the CBO’s previous estimate, which was published just last year, in March 2025. The dramatically shortened timeline means future retirees could face significant cuts to vital health care services far sooner than previously anticipated. As required by the Deficit Control Act, CBO Director Phillip Swagel noted the projections reflect the assumption benefits would be paid as scheduled even after the HI trust fund was exhausted.

The primary culprit for this accelerated depletion is a sharp reduction in the fund’s projected income, heavily driven by legislation passed over the last year. Specifically, the 2025 reconciliation act (Public Law 119-21, more commonly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) significantly reduced the revenues the trust fund normally receives from taxing Social Security benefits. This legislation lowered tax rates and established a temporary deduction for taxpayers age 65 or older. Consequently, this major policy shift enacted during the Trump administration has directly contributed to starving the Medicare safety net of critical future funding.





Oh, so an estimate of an estimate by the CBO who has a horrible track record of being wrong has made an estimate. Color me unimpressed.




 
Oh, so an estimate of an estimate by the CBO who has a horrible track record of being wrong has made an estimate. Color me unimpressed.




No one has grown the national debt more than trump. You know it.

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Recent policy changes and economic shifts have slashed 12 years off the projected life span of the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A, according to a newly updated report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund is now slated to be entirely exhausted by 2040, even though the balance generally increases through 2031, as spending will begin to outstrip income in the following year.

This rapid deterioration of Medicare’s financial solvency represents a stark drop from the CBO’s previous estimate, which was published just last year, in March 2025. The dramatically shortened timeline means future retirees could face significant cuts to vital health care services far sooner than previously anticipated. As required by the Deficit Control Act, CBO Director Phillip Swagel noted the projections reflect the assumption benefits would be paid as scheduled even after the HI trust fund was exhausted.

The primary culprit for this accelerated depletion is a sharp reduction in the fund’s projected income, heavily driven by legislation passed over the last year. Specifically, the 2025 reconciliation act (Public Law 119-21, more commonly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) significantly reduced the revenues the trust fund normally receives from taxing Social Security benefits. This legislation lowered tax rates and established a temporary deduction for taxpayers age 65 or older. Consequently, this major policy shift enacted during the Trump administration has directly contributed to starving the Medicare safety net of critical future funding.





Social security will be broke by 2002
 
Recent policy changes and economic shifts have slashed 12 years off the projected life span of the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A, according to a newly updated report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund is now slated to be entirely exhausted by 2040, even though the balance generally increases through 2031, as spending will begin to outstrip income in the following year.

This rapid deterioration of Medicare’s financial solvency represents a stark drop from the CBO’s previous estimate, which was published just last year, in March 2025. The dramatically shortened timeline means future retirees could face significant cuts to vital health care services far sooner than previously anticipated. As required by the Deficit Control Act, CBO Director Phillip Swagel noted the projections reflect the assumption benefits would be paid as scheduled even after the HI trust fund was exhausted.

The primary culprit for this accelerated depletion is a sharp reduction in the fund’s projected income, heavily driven by legislation passed over the last year. Specifically, the 2025 reconciliation act (Public Law 119-21, more commonly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) significantly reduced the revenues the trust fund normally receives from taxing Social Security benefits. This legislation lowered tax rates and established a temporary deduction for taxpayers age 65 or older. Consequently, this major policy shift enacted during the Trump administration has directly contributed to starving the Medicare safety net of critical future funding.





That's a damn shame, I used Medicare Part A in the past too?!! Part A pay's for hospitalization and home care aid too?!!
 
That's a damn shame, I used Medicare Part A in the past too?!! Part A pay's for hospitalization and home care aid too?!!
People dying of curable diseases that they can no longer afford might consider a suicide mission against enemies of the Republic and our Constitution. No need to travel far since local is easier. :flagsal:
 
Actually, FDR takes first place for that followed by Woodrow Wilson.


Barack Obama also has outdone Trump if you really want to keep score.
Hey, have you seen trump's latest approval/disapproval? You see the thing congressional Republicans forgot to think of - trump doesn't need to run for anything else - he has NO coattails - plus with his stupid tariffs he's tanking our economy!

I guess murdering innocent Americans on their own city streets just isn't working out like you'd hoped, trumptard!

1771896988570.png
 
Hey, have you seen trump's latest approval/disapproval? You see the thing congressional Republicans forgot to think of - trump doesn't need to run for anything else - he has NO coattails - plus with his stupid tariffs he's tanking our economy!

I guess murdering innocent Americans on their own city streets just isn't working out like you'd hoped, trumptard!

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Way to change the subject! I suppose some insults and ad hominem are next?
 
Recent policy changes and economic shifts have slashed 12 years off the projected life span of the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A, according to a newly updated report from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). The Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund is now slated to be entirely exhausted by 2040, even though the balance generally increases through 2031, as spending will begin to outstrip income in the following year.

This rapid deterioration of Medicare’s financial solvency represents a stark drop from the CBO’s previous estimate, which was published just last year, in March 2025. The dramatically shortened timeline means future retirees could face significant cuts to vital health care services far sooner than previously anticipated. As required by the Deficit Control Act, CBO Director Phillip Swagel noted the projections reflect the assumption benefits would be paid as scheduled even after the HI trust fund was exhausted.

The primary culprit for this accelerated depletion is a sharp reduction in the fund’s projected income, heavily driven by legislation passed over the last year. Specifically, the 2025 reconciliation act (Public Law 119-21, more commonly known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) significantly reduced the revenues the trust fund normally receives from taxing Social Security benefits. This legislation lowered tax rates and established a temporary deduction for taxpayers age 65 or older. Consequently, this major policy shift enacted during the Trump administration has directly contributed to starving the Medicare safety net of critical future funding.





You think that was bad wait til the next few years.

They want all the so-called "entitlements" to go away.
 
Oh, so an estimate of an estimate by the CBO who has a horrible track record of being wrong has made an estimate. Color me unimpressed.




rather than deal with reality you attack the source, as usual.

Are you ever going to actually contribute to a discussion?
 
rather than deal with reality you attack the source, as usual.

Are you ever going to actually contribute to a discussion?
No, I correctly pointed out that the source is the CBO and that the CBO is often, almost to the point of always, wrong on their estimates. Using them as the basis to say that Trump's actions with regard to Medicaid will in 10 to 12 years have some deleterious effect on the program is to say the article's writer consulted a psychic who rarely gets predictions correct.

Thus, unless you have something more as proof than a dubious single source, you have nothing.
 
No, I correctly pointed out that the source is the CBO and that the CBO is often, almost to the point of always, wrong on their estimates. Using them as the basis to say that Trump's actions with regard to Medicaid will in 10 to 12 years have some deleterious effect on the program is to say the article's writer consulted a psychic who rarely gets predictions correct.

Thus, unless you have something more as proof than a dubious single source, you have nothing.
That is factually incorrect.
 
Actually, FDR takes first place for that followed by Woodrow Wilson.


Barack Obama also has outdone Trump if you really want to keep score.
FDR, Wilson and Obama, were all dealing with crisis that could have bankrupted the US without liquidity being forced into the economy.

That is EXACTLY when debt is supposed to be used and then when in good times (such as Trump has) debt should be paid down or at a minimum run flat.
 
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