https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2016/06/02/president-obama-just-changed-the-national-debate-on-social-security/
http://www.forbes.com/sites/kotlikoff/2016/07/17/social-security-just-ran-a-6-trillion-deficit-and-no-one-noticed/#27878e7a58a4
If lawmakers don’t act, Social Security’s trust fund will be tapped out in about 18 years.
That’s one takeaway from the Social Security and Medicare trustees’ annual report released Wednesday.
That doesn’t mean retirees will get nothing by 2034. It means that at
that point the program will only have enough revenue coming in to pay
79% of promised benefits.
So if you’re expecting to get $2,000 a month, the program will only be able to pay $1,580.
Technically, Social Security is funded by two trust funds — one for retiree benefits and one for disability benefits.
The 2034 date is the exhaustion date for both funds when combined. But
if considered separately, the old-age fund will be exhausted by 2035,
after which it would be able to pay just 77% of benefits. And the
disability fund will be tapped out by 2023, at which point it could only
pay out 89% of promised benefits.
To make all of Social Security solvent for the next 75 years would
require the equivalent of any of the following: immediately raising the
Social Security payroll tax rate to 14.98% from 12.4% on the first
$118,500 of wages; cutting benefits by 16%; or some combination of the
two.
No comments:
Post a Comment