Report Offers Blunt Reality Check as US Medicare, Social Security Deficit Grows to $130T – How to Protect Yourself

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Report Offers Blunt Reality Check as US Medicare, Social Security Deficit Grows to 0T – How to Protect Yourself

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Uncle Sam has released its latest financial report card and it doesn’t look good.

Treasury Secretary Scott Besant recently warned that America is on an “unsustainable fiscal path” driven by large government spending and high debt (1). The Treasury reported $6.1 trillion in total assets against $47.8 trillion in total liabilities as of September 30, 2025 (2). In other words, the net worth of the government is Negative $41.7 trillion.

To make matters worse, this estimate of total liabilities does not include the unfunded liabilities of social insurance programs like Social Security and Medicare. That liability is reported separately, keeping it off the federal government’s core balance sheet.

According to estimates published by Fortune, Johns Hopkins economist Steve Hanke and former US Comptroller David Walker estimate that, over 75 years, those unfunded liabilities could be worth $88.4 trillion (3). Add that to the $41.7 trillion shortfall on the federal government’s core balance sheet, and you have a total liability of $130 trillion.

Here’s what all these astronomical numbers mean for your personal finances in the coming years.

The huge gap in Uncle Sam’s finances must be closed somehow. There are only a few options, none of which may be pleasant for ordinary American taxpayers.

For example, raising taxes may give the government some additional revenue to manage the debt burden over time. In 2024, legendary investor Warren Buffett predicted a long-term increase in corporate taxes to help close the government’s fiscal deficit (4).

Restructuring the social safety net could be another option.

Raising the retirement age, capping benefits for high-income households or expanding legal immigration to bring more young contributors to the trust fund would close some of the Social Security trust fund gap, according to the Brookings Institution (5).

Unfortunately, many of these solutions are likely to be inconvenient for ordinary workers and savers. You may need to plan for higher taxes or delayed retirement to prepare for any of these possible moves by the future government.

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