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What could save Social Security and Medicare or bring it closer to insolvency

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AUTHOR: Nick Politakis on 2/23/2026

For those HD readers that want to know about the future of two of our biggest entitlement programs.

A new study from the Cato Institute about who pays more in Social Security and Medicare taxes  than actually receives in benefits that has resulted in a $1.7 trillion benefit to those two programs.  Listen or read the piece on Markeplace.

https://www.marketplace.org/story/2026/02/23/immigrants-reduce-deficits-study-shows

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David Lancaster
6 hours ago

I have been writing here for years that one of the solutions to the funding of both Medicare and Social Security is to INCREASE immigration. The ratio of earners to beneficiaries has been a major driver of the drawdown of reserves. Even if, God forbid, we get to the point where Social Security benefits are cut due to payments in being the only source of income for paying out benefits some of the damage could be mitigated by increase income from working immigrants.
Also the claim that undocumented immigrants take jobs from Americans is a straw man argument as they more times than not take jobs Americans don’t want. A recent study I heard about showed the vast majority of Americans prefer desk jobs working on computers, not manual labor.

Last edited 6 hours ago by David Lancaster
Dan Smith
7 hours ago

Thanks, Nick. This is certainly an inconvenient truth.

R Quinn
8 hours ago

It has been well know that illegals immigrants pay FICA taxes totaling billions of dollars a year using false SS numbers given to employers who don’t check or care. Those workers are ineligible for benefits so are subsidizing both programs. It is estimated that such workers are about 5% of the US workforce.

Ben Rodriguez
5 hours ago
Reply to  R Quinn

How can you pay taxes into SS using a “false” SSN, but then not receive benefits under that same SSN? I think it’s been conclusively demonstrated that the federal government doesn’t know who is getting benefits. I don’t believe that the SS Administration suddenly and magically figures out who is a citizen when it comes time to pay, but they were completely oblivious at the time of collecting the money.

William Perry
1 hour ago
Reply to  Ben Rodriguez

I will link a couple of government commentary’s on how they discover and deal with earnings reported incorrectly using a social security number. I will put the second link in a separate post so this post is not held pending review.

In a nutshell after the reported W-2 earnings are electronically filed with the SSA (where employers initially file the W-3 & W-2) the earning information (the W-2) is forwarded to to the IRS. Read this SSA post.

If the reported earnings are not on your 1040 or if a 1040 is not filed for the reported earnings then the IRS sends you a notice.

It is unlikely you are unwilling to pay income tax on earnings that are not yours to get a SS benefit at some point in the distant future.

Additional, the quarterly unemployment reports filed with the states have similar safeguards.

See my following post to a relevant link to the IRS.

Last edited 1 hour ago by William Perry
William Perry
1 hour ago
Reply to  William Perry

IRS – Understanding your CP01E notice.

R Quinn
5 hours ago
Reply to  Ben Rodriguez

You need more than a number to claim SS or get a valid card. No, it hasn’t been demonstrated govt doesn’t know who is getting benefits. It has been demonstrated that record keeping systems are not adequate or accurate, but that is very different from actually paying benefits.

If you were here illegally and never got a work permit, would you risk trying to claim benefits, especially when the number you used was fake or for another person or deceased person?

To apply for benefits you need

• Your Social Security card or a record of your SSN.
• Proof of age/birth: Original birth certificate (or certified copy from the issuing agency), or other proof like a religious record. They must see originals/certified copies—no photocopies or notarized versions accepted for this.
• If not born in the U.S.: Proof of U.S. citizenship or lawful alien status (e.g., passport, naturalization certificate, permanent resident card). Must be original/certified and unexpired.
• Military service records: Copy of discharge papers (e.g., DD-214) if you served before 1968 (photocopy OK).
• Recent earnings proof: Copy of W-2 forms and/or self-employment tax returns for the last year (photocopy OK).
• If applying for family benefits (spouse/child): Their birth certificates, SSNs, marriage/divorce/death certificates as needed.
• Bank info for direct deposit: Routing number, account number (or opt for Direct Express card if no bank account).

Last edited 5 hours ago by R Quinn

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