If you are 24 years old today and expect to begin receiving Social
Security benefits at age 62, you may
be in for a surprise. In 2042, benefits
for retirees may be reduced by 27%
and continue to be cut back each
year thereafter.
A System in Jeopardy
Why has the durability of the Social
Security system come into question
recently? According to the 2004 Social
Security Trustees' Report, an
additional $3.7 trillion will be needed
to keep the system running through
2077. Coupled with a Congressional
Budget Office report predicting
Social Security and Medicare
expenditures to increase around
75% by 2030, economists seem to
have no certain answers now.(All financial projections are based on the intermediate estimates of the 2004 Social Security
Trustees' Report.)
While today's retirees can probably
count on receiving their Social Security
benefits, future generations may not
be so fortunate. This is largely due to
increased longevity, rising costs of
medical technology, and the
impending retirement of the baby
boomer generation (individuals born
between 1946 and 1964).
Mounting Pressure on the
Federal Budget
When substantial numbers of the baby
boomers begin to retire between 2010
and 2030, Social Security surpluses are
expected to dwindle rapidly. By 2018,
it is projected that its annual cost will
outpace tax income and will be
replaced by growing annual cash
deficits. In turn, net Treasury payments
to the Social Security system will greatly
increase pressure on the federal budget.
Here's why:
When Social Security income exceeds
its expenses, the surplus is retained by
the Treasury and used to meet the
government's non–Social Security
expenses. For example, the recent
surpluses in Social Security led to
annual surpluses that went to finance
B–2 bombers, farm subsidies, savings
and loan bailouts and other general
federal expenditures. In return for
borrowing these funds, the Treasury
issues special bonds to the Social
Security trust fund. Through 2003,
the Social Security trust fund held
$1.5 trillion in bonds.
When Social Security's expenses exceed
its income, theoretically these bonds
can be redeemed to meet current
obligations. Beginning in 2018, the
Treasury will need to begin redeeming
these bonds and the government will
have to find the cash to repay the money
it borrowed. Even if the bonds can be
redeemed without any problems,
Social Security will most likely have
serious problems beginning in 2042
and will need to change.
The Treasury's Options
The Treasury has three options:
- Sell bonds to the public — Whether
the public has sufficient appetite to
buy additional bonds at an average
rate of $500 billion per year, even in
the inflated dollars of the 2020s,
remains to be seen.
- Raise taxes — Policymakers can raise
taxes to provide the Treasury with
the necessary money. More directly,
they could raise Social Security taxes,
reducing the need for bond
redemptions.
- Print money — This would increase the
inflation rate. Because Social Security
benefit increases are tied to changes in
the Consumer Price Index, inflation
would result in even higher benefit
costs and the need to redeem bonds
more rapidly, not to mention other
deleterious economic effects.
What Policymakers Might Do
Rather than trying to redeem the
trillions of dollars in bonds
accumulated over several decades,
policymakers would likely enact a
package of revenue increases and
benefit reductions that would bring
Social Security's income and outgo
into balance in 2018 or shortly after.
The following big ticket items are
likely to be included in such a
package:
- Increased Social Security Taxes —
Tax increases are easy to explain,
and most workers pay the additional
amounts through withholding from
wages and salaries.
- Reductions in COLAs — Social
Security's cost–of–living adjustments
(COLAs) were delayed six months by
legislation in 1983. They could be
delayed again, reduced or frozen
temporarily. Many economists believe
that the Consumer Price Index, which
is the basis for Social Security's COLAs,
overstates inflation in any case,
although the government has taken
steps to reduce this overstatement.
- A Higher Normal Retirement Age
(NRA) — Social Security reform
legislation in 1983 raised the NRA
gradually, from 65 for workers born
before 1938, to 67 for those born
after 1959. Congress has already
demonstrated that it can raise the
NRA, and there is no reason to
believe that it will stop at age 67.
- Other Revenue Options — Lastly, other
alternatives under discussion include
using general revenues to sustain the
Social Security system, or prefunding
future benefits with personal savings
accounts or direct investments of the
trust funds.(Social Security's Future — FAQs, http://www.ssa.gov/qa.htm.)
Now Is the Time to Begin
Planning for Retirement
It certainly appears that the Social
Security program will not be as
generous for tomorrow's retirees as it
is for today's. People who hoped to
be enjoying their retirement after 2018
should probably start saving more
now if they want to maintain a
comfortable standard of living after
retiring. Usually, the necessary
amounts needed for retirement cannot
be saved during the last few working
years; it is recommended that they
be accumulated over a much longer
period of time.
Today's workers need to know
that the future of Social Security is
uncertain so they can design their
retirement plans accordingly. Talk
with your Representative to learn
how to prepare for your future.
Consult a Life Insurance Agent
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This material is being provided for informational purposes only. Neither New York Life nor its agents provide legal, tax or accounting advice. Please contact your own advisors for legal, tax and accounting advice.
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