Key facts
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent testified before Congress regarding Social Security and national debt.
- Bessent vowed that seniors would not face higher taxes or reduced benefits under the administration's plan.
- He argued that economic growth and controlling wasteful spending are key to managing the $39 trillion national debt.
- Bessent's '3-3-3' framework aims for 3% annual growth, 3% budget deficits, and 3 million barrels/day energy production increase.
- Democrats countered that Trump's tax cuts and increased spending contribute to the fiscal challenges.
- The Medicare Hospital Insurance trust fund is now projected to be exhausted in 2040, four years earlier than previously expected.
During a congressional hearing, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent defended the Trump administration's approach to managing the national debt and ensuring Social Security's solvency. He asserted that the focus should be on economic growth and reducing 'wasteful' spending, rather than increasing taxes or cutting benefits for seniors. Bessent outlined a '3-3-3' framework, aiming for 3% annual economic growth, budget deficits around 3% of GDP, and a 3 million barrel per day increase in domestic energy production to stabilize the debt at approximately 100% of GDP.
Bessent argued that more working Americans with higher-paying jobs would naturally increase contributions to the Social Security trust fund. He drew clear red lines against any tax hikes or benefit reductions, aligning with President Trump's promises. However, Democratic members of the panel countered that the administration's own fiscal policies, including tax cuts and increased spending, exacerbate the debt and worsen the Social Security shortfall. They pointed to the Medicare trust fund's projected exhaustion in 2040, four years earlier than previously estimated, partly due to weaker tax flows following Trump's tax cuts.
Budget watchdogs, such as the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, have warned that the current debt trajectory is unsustainable without significant policy changes, typically involving a mix of spending cuts and revenue increases. Bessent has publicly criticized these groups, particularly the CRFB, defending tariff revenues as stable and sufficient. Senator Ted Cruz also commented on the 'Trump Accounts' initiative, suggesting it could be a pathway to personal Social Security accounts, a concept historically favored by some conservatives.