August
5, 2012
WASHINGTON — People retiring today
are part of the first generation of workers who have
paid more in Social Security taxes during their
careers than they will receive in benefits after they
retire. It’s a historic shift that will only get worse
for future retirees, according to an analysis by The
Associated Press.
Previous generations got a much better bargain, mainly
because payroll taxes were very low when Social
Security was enacted in the 1930s and remained so for
decades.
“For the early generations, it was an
incredibly good deal,” said Andrew Biggs, a former
deputy Social Security commissioner who is now a
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. “The
government gave you free money and getting free money
is popular.”
If you retired in 1960, you could expect to get back
seven times more in benefits than you paid in Social
Security taxes, and more if you were a low-income
worker, as long you made it to age 78 for men and 81
for women.
As recently as 1985, workers at every income level
could retire and expect to get more in benefits than
they paid in Social Security taxes, though they didn’t
do quite as well as their parents and grandparents.
Not anymore.
A married couple retiring last year after both spouses
earned average lifetime wages paid about $598,000 in
Social Security taxes during their careers. They can
expect to collect about $556,000 in benefits, if the
man lives to 82 and the woman lives to 85, according
to a 2011 study by the Urban Institute, a Washington
think tank.
Social Security benefits are progressive, so most
low-income workers retiring today still will get
slightly more in benefits than they paid in taxes.
Most high-income workers started getting less in
benefits than they paid in taxes in the 1990s,
according to data from the Social Security
Administration.
The shift among middle-income workers is happening
just as millions of baby boomers are reaching
retirement, leaving relatively fewer workers behind to
pay into the system. It’s coming at a critical time
for Social Security, the federal government’s largest
program.
The trustees who oversee Social Security say its
funds, which have been built up over the past 30 years
with surplus payroll taxes, will run dry in 2033
unless Congress acts. At that point, payroll taxes
would provide enough revenue each year to pay about 75
percent of benefits.
To cover the shortfall, future retirees probably will
have to pay higher taxes while they are working,
accept lower benefits after they retire, or some
combination of both.
“Future generations are going to do worse because
either they are going to get fewer benefits or they
are going to pay higher taxes,” said Eugene Steuerle,
a former Treasury official who has studied the issue
as a fellow at the Urban Institute.
How can you get a better return on your Social
Security taxes?
Live longer. Benefit estimates are based on life
expectancy. For those turning 65 this year, Social
Security expects women to live 20 more years and men
to live 17.8 more.
But returns alone don’t fully explain
the value of Social Security, which has features that
aren’t available in typical private-sector retirement
plans, said David Certner, legislative policy director
for AARP.
Spouses can get benefits even if they never earned
wages. Children can get benefits if they have a
working parent who dies. People who are too disabled
to work can get benefits for life.
Because of spousal benefits, most married couples with
only one wage earner will continue to get more in
benefits than they pay in taxes for the foreseeable
future.
“You are buying this lifetime inflation-protected
benefit that you can never run out of and that will
always be there for you,” Certner said. “It protects
your spouse, protects your family and protects you
from disability.”
Certner noted that private pensions, retirement
savings and home values took a big hit when the
economy collapsed, putting a dent in the retirement
plans of many Americans.
“When you have that combination of factors, Social
Security becomes more and more important,” Certner
said. Social Security is financed by a 12.4 percent
tax on wages. Workers pay half and their employers pay
the other half. Self-employed workers pay the full
12.4 percent.
The tax is applied to the first $110,100 of a worker’s
wages, a level that increases each year with
inflation. For 2011 and 2012, the tax rate for
employees was reduced to 4.2 percent, but is scheduled
to return to 6.2 percent in January.
The payroll tax rate was only 2 percent in 1937, the
first year Social Security taxes were levied. It did
not surpass 6 percent until 1962.
Even with low tax rates, Social Security could afford
to pay benefits in the early years because there were
more workers paying the tax for each person receiving
benefits than there are today. In 1960, there were 4.9
workers paying Social Security taxes for each person
getting benefits. Today, there are about 2.8 workers
for each beneficiary, a ratio that will drop to 1.9
workers by 2035, according to projections by the
Congressional Budget Office.
About 56 million people now collect Social Security
benefits, and that number is projected to grow to 91
million in 2035. Monthly benefits average $1,235 for
retired workers and $1,111 for disabled workers.
Social Security provides most older Americans a
majority of their income. About one-quarter of married
couples and just under half of single retirees rely on
Social Security for 90 percent or more of their
income, according to the Social Security
Administration.
“Social Security is what’s carrying me,” said Neta
Homier, a 79-year-old retired hospital worker from
Toledo, Ohio. “There’s no way I would have made it
without it. The kids, they’re on their own, now, and
I’m not going to be a burden for them. That’s what it
would have been if I hadn’t had Social Security.”
Homier said she started receiving Social Security when
she was 63 and now gets about $800 a month, after her
Medicare premiums are deducted. She said her father
died at 51, so he never received Social Security, and
her mother died at 71 and collected benefits for only
a few years.
“It’s definitely worth it,” she said.
At 52, Anthony Riley of Columbus, Ohio, has a
different perspective. Riley said he has a private
retirement account because he worries that Social
Security won’t provide adequate benefits throughout
his retirement.
“I use to think that it was worth paying for your
Social Security, but now I don’t think so,” Riley
said. At 22, Mackenzie Millan of Los Angeles has even
greater doubts about whether Social Security will be a
good deal for her.
“The money that I put aside now, it’s not like that
money is going to be waiting for me. That money is
going toward someone else,” the recent college
graduate said. “If I wanted Social Security 50 years
from now, when I wanted to retire, I would have to
hope that someone else is still working and putting
money aside in their paychecks to pay for my Social
Security at that point.”