Actually, any surplus in those funds must by law be invested in government securities, so that's causing the debt to increase by $10.9 billion.
ETA - assuming the debt figure doesn't eliminate that as being akin to an intra-agency thing, I suppose...
People with practical points to make usually quote the "debt held by the public" number which excludes these because they are meaningless inter-governmental accounting manipulations.
People who intend to exaggerate the size of the debt and/or have previously fallen on their sword to defend the meaningless inter-governmental accounting manipulations and are now stuck with it might throw out the gross debt number.
Originally, SS surpluses were supposed to be invested, not used as taxes and in return, get special issue treasury bonds, AKA, IOUs. That IS a debt and can that keeps getting kicked down the road for future tax payers to deal with
What we need is the old issue that the GOP keeps killing, put SS and medicare funds in lock boxes. Also military retirement funds and other funds similarly being raided. I have seen estimates that had the roiginal plan been followed, we would have $8 -$10 billion in surpluses rthaer than IOUs.
Bush tax cuts. in 2003 when Bush proposed his massive tax cuts for the poor, 450 eminent economists incuding 10 Nobel laureayes warned it would create massive deficits. They were right. CBO estimates show that the Bush deficits had 30% of the total deficits due to the tax cuts. Obama managed only a 6% cut in these thanks to the GOP Congress who wants to make these tax cuts permanent. Up to the melt down, 24% of our total deficits came from Bush tax cuts.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economists'_statement_opposing_the_Bush_tax_cuts
[h=1]Economists' statement opposing the Bush tax cuts[/h] From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The
Economists' statement opposing the Bush tax cuts was a statement signed by roughly 450
economists, including ten of the twenty-four
American Nobel Prize laureates alive at the time, in February 2003 who urged the
U.S. President George W. Bush not to enact the
2003 tax cuts; seeking and sought to gather public support for the position. The statement was printed as a full-page ad in
The New York Times and released to the public through the
Economic Policy Institute. According to the statement, the 450 plus economists who signed the statement believe that the 2003 Bush tax cuts will increase inequality and the budget deficit, decreasing the ability of the U.S. government to fund essential services, while failing to produce economic growth.
[1][2]
______
Under Bush, the national debt doubled from $5.807 billion to $11.929 billion. The Bush era saw government spending rise 26% in the 3rd and 4th Bush budget years, when Bush gained control of House and Senate. Wild and crazy spending.
Much of the rest was the result of the War in Iraq.
And then we had the tremendous cost of the Bush economic meltdown.
When you here some outraged blathering right winger bellow about our massive national debt, consider how we got there. It wasn't Obama.