Fortune: In less than a year, Trump erased 12 years of solvency for the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A
Reposted by Kevin M. Kruse
https://bsky.app/profile/kevinmkruse.bsky.social
@rmayemsinger.bsky.social
Why isn't this a WAY bigger story? Planning to be retired in 2040? Or still alive and on Medicare any time after that? Good luck with your healthcare.
In less than a year, Trump erased 12 years of solvency for the trust fund that pays for Medicare Part A | Fortune
The CBO estimates that benefit reductions would start at 8% in 2040 and steadily climb to a 10% cut by 2056.
fortune.com
2:29 AM · Feb 26, 2026
Why isn't this a WAY bigger story? Planning to be retired in 2040? Or still alive and on Medicare any time after that? Good luck with your healthcare.
— Randi Mayem Singer (@rmayemsinger.bsky.social) 2026-02-26T07:29:26.010Z
greatauntoftriplets
(178,797 posts)liberalgunwilltravel
(1,161 posts)The feeling is mutual.
UpInArms
(54,645 posts)The primary culprit for this accelerated depletion is a sharp reduction in the funds 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.
What is the HI trust fund?
The HI trust fund is the financial backbone for Medicare Part A, which covers essential services including inpatient hospital care, stays in skilled nursing facilities, home health care, and hospice care. Over the next 30 years, the fund is expected to rely on the Medicare payroll tax for about three-quarters of its annual income, with another roughly one-eighth derived from income taxes on Social Security benefits.
However, the recent tax cuts are not the only factor draining the fund. The CBO also cited decreased projections for payroll tax revenues, warning it had to adjust their models to account for lower expected worker earnings. Furthermore, because the trust fund will have smaller balances going forward, it will generate less interest income, creating a compounding negative effect on its overall finances.
rampartd
(4,458 posts)and have given him plenty of money to make it happen.
2naSalit
(101,737 posts)To be here then. But I am already suffering from Medicare premiums that exceed the COLA each year which means I got decrease in my net income each month.
valleyrogue
(2,657 posts)Money can be gotten from the general fund. Ditto for SS.
I am so sick of this "insolvency" bullshit when the government prints the currency.
Fucking ignorant "reporters" with an agenda.
Fortune magazine. Consider the source.
muriel_volestrangler
(105,984 posts)Sure, you say "money can be gotten from the general fund" - but that involves new laws to fix the crap Trump has wrought. "Printing (more of) the currency" means devaluing it, which could crash the dollar. And, sure, they could have done that at any time, and got rid of taxes - but no one has, because of the other effects it would have.
dalton99a
(93,375 posts)calimary
(89,566 posts)How bout maybe we take YOUR money thats larded YOUR pockets, and send it to the folks who depend on Medicare in their old age? The SAME Medicare youve been systematically AND relentlessly trying to rob them of.
If youve robbed Peter (AND Paul) to pay Donald, then the Donald is where well find the ill-gotten gain.