| Highlights    This week's  commentary continues our series on the long-term U.S. budget  problems and possible solutions.  Mandatory spending on programs like Social Security, Medicare,  and Medicaid are very popular and well entrenched in the American  system, but they need to be addressed to fix the long-term budget  problem.  As in other large areas of the U.S. budget, there are no easy  fixes, and hard choices will have to be made. Weekly Economic Calendar This Is Mandatory ReadingAs Congress and the President work together to avoid the looming  fiscal cliff during the lame duck session of Congress, a more  intransient problem remains in the background: the United States'  structural budget deficit. In our Weekly Economic  Commentaries of October 29, 2012 (Budget Debate),  November 19, 2012 (Budget Myths), and November 26, 2012  (Budget Defense), we wrote about how often the budget was  mentioned during the campaign season and how the nation's long-term  budget problem cannot be solved by eliminating waste, fraud, and  abuse, domestic discretionary programs, and foreign aid alone. In  addition, we put the nation's defense spending in context of the  larger budget picture. In our view-a view shared by most  nonpartisan budget experts-all aspects of the budget must be on the  table during the fiscal cliff deliberations, and again in 2013 as  lawmakers hammer out a longer term fix to our budget mess that has  led to the overspending of revenues by about $1 trillion per year  over each of the past five years. Setting the Stage In late 2010, three different nonpartisan organizations released  plans that would put the United States on a path toward a balanced  budget, using a combination of revenue/tax increases and spending  cuts to achieve that goal. These organizations are: 
 While each plan differed on certain aspects of the longer term  fix for our budget woes, they all generally agreed that there are  no easy answers and no quick fixes. Both Democrats and Republicans  populated the three commissions. Some hold (or once held) elected  office, while others served in the federal government or were on  the boards of the many think tanks in and around Washington. All  were focused on finding bipartisan solutions to the problem. In early November 2012, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget  Office (CBO) released a report called "Choice for Deficit  Reduction," which "reviews the magnitude and causes of the federal  government's budgetary imbalance, various options for bringing  spending and taxes into closer alignment, and criteria  thatlawmakers and the public might use to evaluate different  approaches to deficit reduction." In general, the three commissions (and the CBO) concluded that  in order to successfully tackle the longer term deficit problem,  formerly politically untouchable areas must be on the table in any  serious negotiation. These areas include:   Social Security;Defense spending;Farm subsidies;Medicare;Medicaid;Personal and corporate tax rates; andTax expenditures, more commonly known as personal and corporate  tax deductions (e.g., home mortgage interest, state and local real  estate tax, or charitable contributions). The plans put forth by the three deficit commissions did vary on  the amount of revenue increases (via some combination of higher tax  rates, higher premiums for Medicare, fewer deductions, and more  income subject to taxation, etc.) relative to spending cuts (across  all categories of federal spending) needed to achieve a long-term  path toward fiscal stability. Slicing and  Dicing: Mandatory Spending Is the Largest Slice of the Pie   As we noted in prior  budget-related commentaries, the federal budget can be sliced and  diced several ways. One way to look at the budget is by function or  cabinet post, such as the Department of Labor, Department of the  Interior, Department of Defense, etc. Another way is to group the  spending categories together by legislative mandate-mandatory  spending and non-mandatory spending (also known as discretionary  spending). Mandatory spending is all spending that is not  controlled through Congress' annual appropriation process. For the  most part, mandatory spending is based on eligibility criteria and  benefit of payment rules set into law. Examples include Social  Security, Medicare, Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act (aka  "Obamacare"), and interest on the public debt. 
 In recent fiscal  years, mandatory spending has accounted for the majority of all  federal spending, and this slice of the pie is set to rise  dramatically in the coming decade.   Therefore,  curbing mandatory spending, or changing the way mandatory spending  is funded, holds the key to addressing our long-term budget issues.  This week, we will take an in-depth look at mandatory spending, and  explore some of the options available to policymakers to address  these programs over the long term. In fiscal year 2012  (which ended on September, 30, 2012), mandatory spending (Social  Security, Medicare, Medicaid, etc.) totaled more than $2 trillion,  or about 60% of total federal outlays. According to projections  made in August 2012 by the nonpartisan CBO, mandatory spending will  reach $3.9 trillion and will account for more than two-thirds of  federal spending. The CBO projects that spending for Social  Security benefits will increase by 75% over the next 10 years, and  that Medicare spending will basically double over that same time.  Medicaid costs are expected to more than double. By comparison, the  CBO projects that GDP will increase by only 60% over the next 10  years and that federal tax revenue will increase by 117%. The major drivers of  the rising costs are the aging population and rising per-patient  medical costs. In a recent report, the CBO notes: "The increase in  spending for health care programs is much greater than the increase  for Social Security because the health care programs are affected  by rising costs per beneficiary and legislated expansions in  benefits, as well as by the aging of the population." The CBO notes that  these three programs (Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid)  today account for 10% of gross domestic product (GDP). Under  current law, these three programs alone will account for 16% of GDP  by the mid-2020s. By comparison, the CBO noted, all federal  spending (excluding interest payments but including these three  programs) has averaged around 18% of GDP since 1970.   Medicare: Medicare provides  subsidized medical insurance for the elderly and for some disabled  people. Spending for Medicare totaled about $555 billion in 2012,  providing coverage for about 50 million people. The CBO projects  that Medicare spending will continue to rise rapidly over the next  decade, as baby boomers retire and spending per beneficiary  continues to rise.   Medicaid: Medicaid provides  medical care for certain poor and low-income people. Children's  Health Insurance Program (CHIP) provides coverage for children in  low-income families that do not qualify for Medicaid. federal  spending for Medicaid and CHIP was about $251 billion and $9  billion, respectively, in 2012, and over 58 million American  receive Medicaid benefits. The CBO projects that federal Medicaid  spending will rise rapidly over the coming decades because of  expanding eligibility under the Affordable Care Act, the aging of  the population, and rising costs per beneficiary. Social  Security: Social Security, the  federal government's largest single program, provides benefits to  retired workers (through Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, OASI), to  people with disabilities (through Disability Insurance, DI) and to  their families as well as to some survivors of deceased workers. In  all, more than 56 million Americans currently receive some type of  Social Security benefit. Those benefits are financed primarily by  payroll taxes collected on people's earnings. The CBO anticipates  that starting in 2016, if current laws remain in place, the  program's annual spending will regularly exceed its tax revenues,  and by 2038, the Social Security trust fund will be exhausted  (i.e., out of money). As we have noted in  prior Weekly Economic Commentaries, policymakers face very  difficult choices in dealing with the deficit in other areas of the  budget (defense, non-defense discretionary, etc.). The choices  faced in dealing with the runaway pace of mandatory spending are  even more difficult, given that programs like Social Security and  Medicare are both well entrenched and among the most popular  federal government programs. Still, the commissions, think tanks,  and the CBO have cited several options to rein in mandatory  spending. The options for  Social Security fall into five categories, as defined by the latest  CBO report:     Increases in the  Social Security payroll tax;  Changes in the way  benefits are calculated;  Increases in benefits  for low earners;  Increases in the full  retirement age; and  Reductions in the  cost-of-living adjustments that are applied to continuing  benefits. For example,  combining the concepts underlying the bullets above, the CBO notes  that if the Social Security payroll tax rate was increased  immediately and permanently by 1.95 percentage points-from the  current rate of 12.40% to 14.35%-or if scheduled benefits were  reduced by an equivalent amount, then the trust funds' projected  balance at the end of 2086 would equal projected outlays for 2087.  As noted in the nearby box, under current policies, the trust funds  would be exhausted by 2038. Short of eliminating  the programs altogether, the policy options to slow the pace of  spending on Medicare and Medicaid are similar to the options for  Social Security and include concepts like:     Raising payroll taxes  that go toward funding Medicare;  Cutting the rate of  growth of payments to providers of Medicare services;  Repealing some of the  components of the Affordable Care Act;  Raising Medicare  premiums;  Reforming Medicare  cost-sharing rules; and  Reducing Medicare and  Medicaid fraud. While none of these  options by themselves completely solves the problem of medical  costs rising faster than the growth rate of GDP, some do make a  sizable dent in the deficit. For example, the Bowles-Simpson budget  commission noted that by combining several of the changes noted  above, Medicare spending could be reduced by $110 billion over the  next 10 years. But this policy  option would likely come at a cost to both users of Medicare:  seniors and doctors. Seniors would face sharply higher  out-of-pocket health care costs, which has implications for many  other parts of the economy. For example, seniors would likely cut  back on other areas (housing, leisure activities, etc.) to fund  their health care spending. Lower payments to providers of Medicare  services (doctors) would see their income fall (or rise at a  slower) rate, leading some doctors to leave the medical field, and  others to cut back on their own spending, both business and  personal. The bottom line is  that much work remains to be done in order to address the real  driver of the nation's long-term budget woes: mandatory spending,  including Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. As with the  other possible budget remedies, there are no easy choices in  dealing with mandatory spending, but the longer we wait to address  them, the more difficult it becomes to address them later on.   IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES Gross Domestic  Product (GDP) is the monetary value of all the finished goods and  services produced within a country's borders in a specific time  period, though GDP is usually calculated on an annual basis. It  includes all of private and public consumption, government outlays,  investments and exports less imports that occur within a defined  territory. Federal Funds  Rate is the interest rate at which depository institutions actively  trade balances held at the federal Reserve, called federal funds,  with each other, usually overnight, on an uncollateralized  basis. Private Sector -  the total nonfarm payroll accounts for approximately 80% of the  workers who produce the entire gross domestic product of the United  States. The nonfarm payroll statistic is reported monthly, on the  first Friday of the month, and is used to assist government policy  makers and economists determine the current state of the economy  and predict future levels of economic activity. It doesn't  include: - general  government employees - private  household employees - employees of  nonprofit organizations that provide assistance to  individuals - farm  employees The economic forecasts set forth in the presentation may not  develop as predicted and there can be no guarantee that strategies  promoted will be successful. Stock investing  involves risk including loss of principal. The index of  leading economic indicators (LEI) is an economic variable, such as  private-sector wages, that tends to show the direction of future  economic activity. International  investing involves special risks, such as currency fluctuation and  political instability, and may not be suitable for all  investors. INDEX DESCRIPTIONS China CPI: In  total there are about 600 "national items" used for calculating the  all-China CPI. The list of items is revised annually for  representativeness based on purchases reported in the household  surveys. The number of items can change from year to year, but  rarely by more than 10 in any given year. The Consumer  Price Index (CPI) is a measure of the average change over time in  the prices paid by urban consumers for a market basket of consumer  goods and services. The Michigan  Consumer Sentiment Index (MCSI) ia a survey of consumer confidence  conducted by the University of Michigan. The Michigan Consumer  Sentiment Index (MCSI) uses telephone surveys to gather information  on consumer expectations regarding the overall economy. The  S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index measures the  change in value of the U.S. residential housing market. The  S&P/Chase-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index tracks the  growth in value of real estate by following the purchase price and  resale value of homes that have undergone a minimum of two  arm's-length transactions. The index is named for its creators,  Karl Chase and Robert Shiller. The Empire State  Manufacturing Index is a seasonally-adjusted index that tracks the  results of the Empire State Manufacturing Survey. The survey is  distributed to roughly 175 manufacturing executives and asks  questions intended to gauge both the current sentiment of the  executives and their six-month outlook on the sector. This research  material has been prepared by LPL Financial. To the extent you  are receiving investment advice from a separately registered  independent investment advisor, please note that LPL Financial is  not an affiliate of and makes no representation with respect to  such entity. Tracking #  1-126559 Exp. 12/13 |