ISSUE GUIDES: Social Security
OVERVIEW
Social Security

Social Security, the nation's retirement system, is one of the most popular government programs in U.S. history, ensuring Americans' stable retirement for 75 years. But now that the first of the 76 million baby boomers have started retiring -- and are projected to live longer than any previous generation of Americans -- the question is how the program can be sustained.
An estimated 10,000 people a day will become eligible for Social Security benefits over the next two decades, putting an unprecedented strain on the system. In less than a decade, in 2017, Social Security is scheduled to start paying out more in benefits than it collects each year in payroll taxes. If nothing is done, the Social Security trust fund is projected to run dry in 2037 Sometimes people say the system will be bankrupt at that point, but that isn't really true. Social Security would still receive tax revenues and still function – but it could pay only about three-quarters of promised benefits to retirees.
Nearly everyone believes Social Security is important, but no consensus has emerged, either in Washington or among the public at large, on what approach the government should take to keep it financially stable.
At the same time, Americans as a nation only save a miniscule percentage of their income, and individual investment plans (like the widely used 401K) have been battered by the global financial crisis and recession. That may leave Americans' own resources dwindling even as the government safety net begins to fray.
How Social Security Works
Nearly all Americans over 65, some 53 million people, collect monthly Social Security benefits, the backbone of the nation's retirement income system. Social Security was originally designed to provide one leg of a "three-legged stool" for retirement security, the others being savings and a pension. Now, however, as many companies have moved away from traditional pensions and fewer people have adequate personal savings, Americans have become increasingly reliant on Social Security.
The Social Security Administration says that about a third of the recipients depend on Social Security for more than 90 percent of their income, while another third rely on the program for more than half of their money. The agency estimates that about 13 million would fall below the poverty line without Social Security.
Social Security is a "pay-as-you-go" insurance program, meaning that the current workforce pays for the benefits of the current retirees. And, eventually, when people who are working now become retirees, their benefits will be paid by those who are working in the future. Employees pay 6.2 percent of every paycheck toward Social Security, and their employers pay the same amount as well. So today's workers won't get back "their" money when they retire; the money taken out of their paychecks today go to those receiving Social Security today.
In 1950, there were 16 workers to support every one beneficiary of Social Security. Today, there are only 2.9 workers for every retiree. By 2030, the ratio will fall to an estimated 2.2 workers per retiree. Fewer workers today will mean fewer Social Security dollars later, when those same workers retire.
Americans become eligible for Social Security benefits at age 62. But if they retire then, they receive a smaller amount then than if they wait until age 66, when full benefits kick in. Only about 5 percent of retirees, however, wait until after they've reached full retirement age to claim benefits, preferring to take the decreased amount instead of working a few years longer.
Trust In The Trust Fund?
With the baby boomers still in the workforce and paying into the system, Social Security has been running a surplus. Since everyone could see this demographic problem coming, the government set up a "trust fund" for this extra money. When the system starts to fall short of tax revenue in 2017, Social Security will be able to draw on this trust fund to keep paying full benefits until 2037.
The problem is that this trust fund isn't billions of dollars in cash sitting in a bank somewhere. The federal government has borrowed the surplus money from the fund to pay its year-to-year bills, giving the fund Treasury bonds in return. There's nothing illegal or secret about this. But what it means is that when the trust fund needs its money in 2017, the government will have to pay it back. The risk isn't that Social Security won't pay its benefits, at least not for a long time; it's that the cost of keeping up with those benefits will put an increasing strain on the federal budget. That means the government may have to raise taxes or cut other programs to keep Social Security going.
Dodging Bullets, Deferring Reform
Over the years there has been some bipartisan support for looking at the long-term financial health of the program. Most experts say the sooner we do something, the easier the changes will be for everybody. The Social Security trustees say that if the government were to act now, the program could be maintained as is for another 75 years by either cutting benefits by 12 percent, or raising the payroll tax from 12.4 percent currently to 14.24 percent. But if the government were to wait until later, the tax increase or benefit cuts would have to be more dramatic to get the same effect.
Prominent recent proposals to fix the system reflect the bipartisan desire to make reform as painless as possible. One possibility is to raise the cap on income subject to the Social Security tax — currently $106,800. Another is to make technical adjustments in the Consumer Price Index to reflect the widely, though not universally, shared view that the index overstates inflation. Since Social Security recipients get cost-of-living increases based on the index, a change in the CPI could reduce the cost of the program.
Other proposals have centered on using the stock market to increase returns, either by having the government invest part of the Social Security fund or allowing individuals to do so in private investment accounts. President Bush proposed such a plan in 2005 without success.
Other countries do have privatized retirement systems, such as mandatory retirement savings accounts on a model pioneered by Chile and since adopted in various forms by Australia and the United Kingdom. Workers would be required to put their money into the accounts, just as they are required to pay Social Security taxes, but could decide how their contributions would be invested. The government would guarantee a certain minimum pension to everyone, but some retirees would benefit more than others. Advocates say this allows people to take advantage of the greater long-term returns possible in the stock market – but of course, participants would also run the risk of losing money.
The Public's View
Public opinion surveys show that most Americans believe they'll need Social Security in retirement, with eight in 10 saying it will be either a major (34 percent) or a minor (46 percent) source of income for them. But surveys also show the public is not confident the Social Security system will continue to provide benefits of equal value to those received by retirees today, and that younger and lower-income Americans much more worried about the program than senior citizens.
But what changes are acceptable? Most oppose cost-cutting options such as increasing the retirement age, raising payroll taxes or cutting benefits. Among the few measures that elicit majority support would be to a href="http://www.gallup.com/poll/1693/Social-Security.aspx" target="_blank">reduce Social Security benefits for high-income families and require upper-income people to pay Social Security tax on all of their income. But surveys show that public support for investing Social Security funds in the stock market or letting people invest their own Social Security taxes can vary widely depending on how the question is worded. Public support falls off, for example, when survey questions raise the issue of investment risk. This type of survey result is usually a sign that the public hasn't learned enough about an issue or thought through all the implications.
Choicework
For more detail on how society could address this issue, visit our Discussion Guide, which sets out four alternative approaches.
The points of view are drawn both from what the experts say about an issue and from what the public thinks about it, based on surveys and focus groups. We call this section "Choicework." Each point of view comes with the arguments for and against, along with some potential costs and tradeoffs - because every plan has both pros and cons, and a citizen should face both honestly.
• One perspective argues that Social Security is a promise made by the government to all Americans, and must be maintained intact. Only minor changes are required to save the system, in this view.
• Another perspective says that promise must be adapted to new realities, and argues that it makes no sense to jeopardize other public priorities to shore up Social Security. The program can only be saved by trimming benefits and requiring Americans to work longer before retiring.
• A third view says we can avoid benefit cuts and other unpleasant choices by permitting the government to invest Social Security funds in the stock market to gain a higher rate of return.
• Individuals should take responsibility for their own financial security, according to a fourth perspective, which argues that Social Security should be replaced with mandatory savings accounts controlled by individuals.










