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Has Donald Trump Strengthened Social Security?

For nearly eight decades, Social Security has made guaranteed monthly payouts to eligible beneficiaries, many of which are retired workers. Today, it's a program responsible for lifting over a third of its recipients above the federal poverty level. In particular, it keeps over 15 million seniors out of poverty who might otherwise struggle to make ends meet without their monthly stipend.

Then again, Social Security is also a program that's skating on thin ice, at least according to the 2018 report from the Board of Trustees.

A person tightly holding a Social Security card between their thumb and index finger.
A person tightly holding a Social Security card between their thumb and index finger.

Image source: Getty Images.

Social Security is facing an imminent cash crunch

Since its inception, the Social Security Board of Trustees has provided a comprehensive annual report detailing the short-term (10 year) and long-tem (75 year) outlook for the program. Despite a major bipartisan overhaul in 1983 under the Reagan administration, the trustees' report has been warning of a cash shortfall over the long run since 1985. This cash shortfall implies that the existing payout schedule isn't sustainable without additional revenue, expenditures cuts, or some combination of the two.

Possibly beginning in 2019, or very soon thereafter, the program will hit its inflection point of expending more than it's collecting. Once this net cash outflow begins, it's expected to widen with each passing year, ultimately leading to the depletion of Social Security's nearly $2.9 trillion in asset reserves by 2034. If Congress fails to act, an across-the-board benefit cut of up to 21% may be needed to sustain payouts through 2092. And since more than three out of five of today's retired workers lean on Social Security for at least half of their monthly income, this is a scary outlook.

It's for these reasons that the American public has called on Congress and President Trump to resolve Social Security's projected $13.2 trillion cash shortfall. The big question is: Has Donald Trump enacted policies to strengthen Social Security?

The answer depends on your time frame.

President Trump signing paperwork at this desk in the Oval Office.
President Trump signing paperwork at this desk in the Oval Office.

President Trump signing paperwork at this desk in the Oval Office. Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead.

Trump's indirect approach has made Social Security stronger in the very short term

Whereas most working and retired Americans would prefer direct changes to Social Security, President Trump has advocated against directly amending the program.

While speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2013, Trump suggested that directly amending Social Security is akin to political suicide, without using those exact words. Trump understands that one of the consequences of directly altering Social Security is that some group of people, whether it be the wealthy or future retirees, are going to be worse off than they are now, and that could mean losing votes come the election time.