From Reuters.com:
The U.S. Social Security and Medicare  retirement and health programs for the elderly will run short of funds  sooner than previously thought because the recession has taken a toll  on tax revenues, a government report released on Tuesday showed.
 
The Social Security trust fund will be  exhausted by 2037, four years earlier than previously estimated, and  the Medicare hospital trust fund will become insolvent by 2017, two  years earlier than estimated, said a report by the trustees of the two  popular programs.
Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said that  "the dual effect of the economy and unemployment has produced a  downward pressure on the financial security" of the Social Security  program.
The latest report said Medicare's financial  problems are more severe than those facing Social Security because of  rapidly rising health-care costs.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said  the report shows the urgency for the government to overhaul the two  programs to help contain rising costs as the baby boom generation begins  to retire and draw on benefits.
"The sooner we come together to  make the difficult but achievable changes needed to strengthen the solvency  of Medicare and Social Security, the more time we'll give the American  people to plan and to adjust, and the sooner we'll be able to ensure  that these vital programs will be as important for generations to come  as they are today," Geithner, one of trustees of the two programs,  said at a news conference.
For years, lawmakers have been concerned  about the long term financing of the two programs as the 77 million  strong baby boom generation retires.
