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InvestorGuide University > Subject: Retirement > How Secure Is Social Security?
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Social Security
How Secure Is Social Security?
by Roger Wohlner   (Write for us!)
(Click on the links within the article to get definition of that word)

Unless you're close to retirement age, whether you can count on Social Security benefits to help fund your retirement is a concern.

Currently, the system collects far more in Social Security taxes than it pays out in benefits, but that will change drastically as growing numbers of baby boomers retire. At the end of 2003, the Social Security system had excess assets of $1.5 trillion, invested in special-issue Treasury bonds. Starting in 2018, the system will start paying out more in benefits than it collects in taxes, so it will have to start using interest and principal from its bond investments. Those assets are expected to be totally depleted by 2042. At that point, unless changes are made to the system, benefits need to be reduced by 27% to equal revenues collected (Source: Social Security Administration, 2004).

When the Social Security system's excess funds are invested in Treasury bonds, the federal government takes the proceeds and spends it on current budget items. Thus, there is concern about where the government will get the money when the Social Security system starts to cash in these bonds. Since the government doesn't have excess cash, it will have to increase taxes, reduce other expenditures, or issue more debt. How easily the government will be able to do that is of considerable debate, especially since growing deficits are becoming a major concern.

There are three main factors causing this substantial shift in the finances of the Social Security system:
  • Large numbers of baby boomers are about to retire.
    Currently, 47 million people receive Social Security benefits. Starting in 2008, 77 million baby boomers will be retiring over an 18-year period (Source: The Wall Street Journal, June 28, 2004).

  • Workers paying for these benefits will drop proportionally.
    Many people mistakenly believe that all their contributions over the years are accumulated in an account in their name and benefits are paid from that account when they retire. However, Social Security is a "pay-as-you-go" system, meaning current workers pay the benefits for current retirees. In 1950, 16 workers were paying for each retiree's benefits. Currently, there are 3.3 workers supporting each retiree, which will drop to only 2 workers for each retiree in 40 years (Source: Social Security Administration, 2004).

  • Life expectancies are increasing.
    When Social Security started in 1935, the life expectancy of a 65-year-old was 12.5 years. That figure is now 17.5 years, meaning payment of an additional five years of benefits, and is expected to continue to increase in the future (Source: The Wall Street Journal, June 28, 2004).
The convergence of these three trends will place a tremendous burden on the Social Security system. Some of the more common alternatives suggested to reform the Social Security system include: Will the Social Security system provide benefits for the baby boomers? Yes, it is a system so ingrained in our culture that it would be very difficult to eliminate. Will those benefits be as generous as they are now? Probably not, since drastic changes will be needed to keep the system viable in the future. While dealing with the problem now would allow the changes to occur gradually over a number of years, many doubt that Congress will have the foresight to deal with this politically unpopular problem before it becomes absolutely necessary to do so. Thus, personal savings will become an even more important component of retirement income.


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