
Published on Portside (https://portside.org/)
The Social Security Shortfall and Trump’s Big Military
Budget
https://portside.org/2026-06-22/social-security-shortfall-and-trumps-big-military-budget
Dean Baker
June 10, 2026
Center for Economic and Policy
Research

The release of the 2026 Social
Security Trustees Report got the usual suspects (a.k.a. “very
serious people”) genuflecting about the large projected shortfall. As of 2034,
the program is projected to be unable to pay full benefits. This would mean a
22 percent cut in benefits if no additional revenue is added.
There are three points worth making
here.
- As an economic matter, the projected depletion of the
trust fund and resulting shortfall in the program means nothing;
- The main reason for the projected shortfall is the
upward redistribution of income over the last half-century;
- The projected shortfall is far less money than the
increase in military spending that Donald Trump is requesting for his 2027
budget.
Trust
Fund Accounting
On the first point, the spending to
repay the bonds held from the trust fund in 2033 comes from the Treasury. Its
impact on the economy would be the same as the spending in 2034, when the trust
fund no longer holds any bonds.
There is an issue that the law gives
the program a claim to the funds needed to repay the bonds it holds. Social
Security does not have a claim to the money needed to pay full benefits once
the last bonds are sold and the trust fund is depleted.
This is an important legal point,
but from an economic standpoint, it is money from the Treasury in both cases.
If the country could afford to pay full benefits in 2033 when the trust fund
held bonds. It can afford to pay full benefits after it has sold all its bonds,
however the law would need to be changed.
Upward
Redistribution Hurt Social Security’s Finances
In 1982, the last time the program
had a major overhaul, just 10 percent of wage income went to high wage earners
whose income escaped taxation by being over the cap (currently around $185,000)
for wages subject to the 12.4 percent Social Security tax. In the last quarter
century, close to 17 percent of wage income went over the cap.
This upward redistribution of wage
income, coupled with the redistribution from wages to profits in the last
quarter century, has substantially reduced the amount of revenue going into
the trust fund. It shouldn’t be surprising that the people who engineered the
upward redistribution of the last half-century — through trade policy, stronger patent and copyright protections,
bank bailouts, and tech policy — now want to reduce people’s Social Security
benefits.
Donald
Trump’s Increase in Military Spending is Twice the Size of the Shortfall
Projected for 2034
The media seem to take pride in reporting huge budget numbers without
providing any context that would make them meaningful to
their audience. The projected Social Security shortfall is a great example. The
usual group of budget hawks is being brought out to tell us that it is a huge
program, which we can’t afford, and requires cuts.
Yet, we did not hear the same chorus
in response to Donald Trump’s proposed increase in the military budget from
$864 billion in the last year of the Biden presidency to $1,500
billion in 2027. Even adjusting for inflation between the two years, the
increase would still be close to $590 billion. There was no rationale given for
why the country suddenly needs to spend so much more on its military. Trump
certainly did not propose this sort of massive increase in spending in his
campaign.
The proposed increase in military
spending dwarfs the shortfall projected in the Social Security program for
2034.
Adjusting for inflation (assuming
2.5 percent annually), Trump’s requested increase would be just under $700
billion in 2034 dollars. By contrast, the Social Security Trustees project that the program will face a $314
billion shortfall in its annual budget in 2034.
We can argue about what should be
considered big and what should be considered small, but there is zero doubt
that Trump’s proposed increase in military spending is hugely larger than the
projected shortfall in Social Security. If anyone thinks that Social Security
poses a big problem for the budget, they must believe that Trump’s military
spending poses a much bigger problem, since it is more than twice as
large.
And, as noted earlier, we are
already paying the money for Social Security; it is just coming out of a
different pocket. The proposed increase in military spending, at 1.6 percent of
GDP, will be newly committed funds coming from the Treasury, which will impose
substantial demands on the economy. Any honest person who says funding Social
Security poses a serious budget problem must believe that Trump’s military
spending poses a far bigger problem.
Dean
Baker is the senior economist at the Center for
Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC.
The Center for Economic and Policy
Research promotes democratic debate on issues that affect people’s lives, in
the US and other parts of the world.
Through rigorous, independent
research and analysis we strive to provide the general public and policymakers
with the tools to better understand the problems and choices that they face.
CEPR is committed to presenting issues in an accurate and understandable
manner, so that the public is better prepared to choose among various policy
options.
Source URL: https://portside.org/2026-06-22/social-security-shortfall-and-trumps-big-military-budget
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