A health care activist © AFP/Getty Images/File Chris Hondros |
WASHINGTON (AFP) - The United States is burning through its health care and retirement fund pools faster than planned, with the Medicare trust fund to be exhausted by 2024, five years earlier than expected, officials said Friday.
A combination of higher costs and lower-than-expected revenues has worsened the outlook for Medicare as well as for Social Security, which will use up its huge trust fund in 2036, one year earlier than was projected last year, plan trustees said in their annual reports.
They emphasized that the forecasts point to dates when the level of payouts to beneficiaries to match incoming funds -- mostly payroll deductions and investment earnings -- will have to be reduced.
Medicare, which offers health care to retired and disabled Americans, would only be able to offset 90 percent of the costs of care, while Social Security would pay out only 75 percent of scheduled benefits, after the respective dates.
The Medicare report stressed that the program had gained a "sizable improvement" in its financial outlook due to the controversial Affordable Care Act of the administration of President Barack Obama.