Five Big Myths About Social Security
by Kathryn Baer September 09, 2010 07:10 AM (PT)
http://uspoverty.change.org/blog/view/five_big_myths_about_social_securityFor some months now, bloggers and advocates of a liberal persuasion have been engaging in preemptive strikes against the President's Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform.
They've dubbed it the Catfood Commission because they expect it to recommend changes in Social Security that will leave low-income seniors unable to afford anything to eat except pet food.
Perhaps this will prove to be much ado about nothing. The executive order that established the commission requires 14 of the 18 members to agree on any recommendation it issues. The split between Democrats and Republicans will make that challenging but for Social Security, not impossible.
Just about everyone from far right to left seems to agree that some changes will be needed. The danger is that decisions will be driven or at least sold to us by myths that have been floating around for quite awhile now. Fortunately, we've also got some expert mythbusters on the scene.
So here are the leading myths and the truths I've been able to glean.
Myth #1: Social Security Spending Will Increase the DeficitOne would certainly think it would. Why else would the President's commission be dealing with it? Well, not because it will, in and of itself, drive up the long-term deficit.
Social Security is, by law, self-financing. Benefits don't come out of the general pot of tax revenues. They're paid for by payroll taxes, plus the interest on Treasury bonds in which the surplus is invested. So if the system runs short, it will have to reduce benefits or get a supplement from Congress. The latter could, of course, add to the deficit. But it's merely hypothetical.
However, there's another, more likely way that Social Security spending could affect the federal budget. As I said, the surplus is invested in government bonds. So if current payroll taxes, plus interest, aren't enough to cover the benefits the system owes, it will have to, in effect, start cashing in the bonds. The government will have to find the funds to cover the debt.
Myth #2: Social Security Will Go BrokeThis is an old warhorse. It's frequently been used to argue for dismantling the system. And it's technically true, assuming (as we shouldn't) that the federal government does nothing until the surplus that's been deliberately built is altogether depleted.
This surplus, often referred to as the trust fund, is currently about $2.5 trillion. As the New York Times reported in March, the trustees have projected that it will be down to zero in 2037. Even this doesn't mean the system will be broke. Workers and their employers will still be paying Social Security payroll taxes. Left unchanged, they'll be enough to cover about 78 percent of benefits.
Myth #3: The So-Called Trust Is Just a Bunch of IOUsThis is true, but not the way people who say it want us to think. All bonds are IOUs promises to pay back the principal that's been lent at some future date. The bonds the Social Security trust fund holds are the securest kind backed by "the full faith and credit of the U.S. government." This is the same guarantee that many country's national banks and other large investors rely on. Would the government risk losing their trust by defaulting on its debt to the Social Security system?
Myth #4: We've Got to Raise the Eligibility Age for Retirement BenefitsThis seems to be the most talked-about "fix." House Minority Leader John Boehner got a lot of heat when he talked about raising the eligibility age to 70. But some leading House Democrats have mentioned it as well. Also, among others, the liberal-leaning Urban Institute.
The notion here is that Social Security wasn't set up to pay out for many years of retirement. People are living longer than they were in the mid-1930s, when the system was created. This is true, but not nearly so true as some would give us to believe.
Life expectancies were much shorter then, but mainly because infant and child mortality rates were much higher. MSN Money's personal finance expert gives us the details. Briefly, if men survived to 65 the original retirement age they could look forward to an average of 12 more years. Women who lived to 65 had, on average, 13 years to collect benefits.
Today, average life expectancies beyond 65 are greater. A report (pdf) by the Center on American Progress shows that, by 2002, men who lived to 65 had gained, on average, 4.6 years and women 6.5 years. Increases indeed, but not dramatic and greater for high-income than for low-income people.
In any event, the system has already been revised to raise the age at which workers can become eligible for full benefits. If you were born after 1942, you've got to be 66 to receive them. Those born in 1960 or later will have to be 67.
What this means, says the Economic Policy Institute, is that the ratio of work years to retirement years will be no greater in 2022 than it was in 1983, when Congress passed the phased-in age increase. In other words, workers may be living longer, but they're also either paying into the Social Security system longer or receiving permanently lower benefits.
Today, you can start receiving benefits at 62, but they'll be reduced according to a formula based on how many months before full retirement age that is. For example, if your full retirement age is 66, your benefits will be cut by 25 percent. If you were born after 1959, the cut will be about 30 percent.
Raise the eligibility age even higher and there are bound to be more people constrained to claim early benefits especially low-income people, who often have physically demanding jobs.
Myth #5: We've Got to Cut Social Security BenefitsThe idea here, as with raising the retirement age, is that we've got to bring spending on retirement benefits down. In fact, many experts, including the Economic Policy Institute, argue that raising the retirement age is itself a benefits cut because workers will get less before they die.
But anyone who's ever had to plan for some future new or higher expenditure knows you don't necessarily have to cut other spending. You can increase income instead. It might not always be possible for us as individuals. But it's a slam dunk for Social Security.
Under the current system, the amount of earnings subject to Social Security payroll taxes is capped. When benefits are increased to keep pace with inflation, the cap is adjusted based on average national wages. The benefits you're ultimately entitled to are based on a formula applied to your average monthly earnings during the 35 years you earned the most. But the only earnings that count are those that were subject to the payroll tax.
The cap this year is $106,800 of earnings. This means that lots of people even some we're not accustomed to thinking of as high-salaried will have earned income not subject to Social Security payroll taxes. However, only a fraction of them will have earnings above the cap for most of their working years.
Say there were no cap. The Congressional Research Service looked at the results under several scenarios. As blogger Ezra Klein's research shows, eliminating the cap and increasing benefits accordingly would just about take care of the projected shortfall. Eliminating the cap but using the existing base to calculate benefits would actually produce a surplus.
Taxing all earnings without adjusting benefits would be politically problematic. Maybe any fiddling with the cap would be. Maybe, as Klein argues, we should leave Social Security alone and, I infer, use general revenues to make up for the shortfall when it comes.
What's clear as day is that we don't have to cut benefits to "fix" a program that now safeguards nearly half of all seniors from dire poverty and cat food dinners.