Title: Social Security and Social Insurance
1Chapter 8
- Social Security and Social Insurance
2Social Security Act of 1935
- Requirements at that time
- Retirement Age 65
- Payroll Tax
- 1 for employer and employee
- Tax applied to the first 3000 of earned income
3Social Security in the United States
- OASDI
- Old Age
- Survivors
- Disability InsuranceÂ
- HI Health Insurance (Medicare)Â
- UI Unemployment Insurance
4FICA
- Federal Insurance Contribution Act
- Employers and employees each currently contribute
7.65 of wages in FICA tax. - 15.3 for the self-employed
- Taxes applied on earned income up to 87,000 in
2003 (indexed). - Â
5Fully Funded vs Pay-As-You-Go
- A Fully Funded system current fund has balances
sufficient to pay the present value of all future
obligations. - Â
- A Pay-As-You-Go system current taxes pay for
current benefits.
The current U.S.system is a modified
pay-as-you-go system with a trust fund as backup.
6Social Security Trust Fund
- Since 1982, Social Security taxes collected have
greatly exceeded benefits paid out. - The trust fund is an accounting mechanism by
which U.S. government debt is issued to the
Social Security Administration in exchange for SS
fund surpluses. - This debt will be sold to the public when taxes
paid fall below what is needed to pay benefits.
7Retirement Age
- People born prior to 1935 can retire with full
benefits at 65. - People born between 1936 and 1942 can retire with
full benefits at age 65 2 months for every year
after 1936 they were born. - People born between 1943 and 1954 can retire with
full benefits at age 66. - People born between 1955 and 1960 can retire with
full benefits at age 66 2 months for every year
after 1955 they were born. - People born after 1960 can retire at full
benefits at age 67.
8How Retirement Benefits are Computed
- The AIME (Average Index of Monthly Earnings)
calculates the highest 35 years of
inflation-adjusted earnings, expressed in monthly
terms. - The PIA (Primary Insurance Amount) is the amount
to which a individual is entitled given their
AIME.Â
9Replacement Rates
- The Gross Replacement Rate is the monthly
retirement benefit divided by the monthly labor
earnings in the year prior to retirement. - The Net Replacement Rate is the monthly after-tax
benefit divided by the monthly after-tax labor
earnings in the year prior to retirement .
10Gross Replacement Rates by Income2002
11Figure 8.1 How Gross Replacement Rates for Social
Security Pension Recipients Vary with
Pre-retirement Earnings
110
100
90
80
70
Gross Replacement Rate (Percent)
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
Gross Monthly Earning in the Year Prior to
Retirement (Dollars)
12Spousal and Dependent Benefits
-
- .5 of PIA is added for a spouse over age 65 and
for each dependent child
13Divorce and the Two-Income Family
- A woman who worked while married to a high
income-earning husband will get nothing or
virtually nothing for the taxes she paid. She and
her husband would get 1.5 times his PIA if she
earned nothing and 1.5 time his PIA if she earned
a modest income. - Divorced people are entitled to either their own
PIA or a spouse/widow benefit (whichever is
larger). This applies to multiple spouses as
well. Thus, breadwinners can have multiple people
receiving half or full pensions based on a single
taxpayers earnings.
14Other Anomalies
- When one party in a marriage dies, the benefit to
the survivor depends on who made the money. - If both earned equal amounts, then when one dies
the other receives their own amount. - If one earned all the money and the breadwinner
dies, the survivor keeps the spouses pension
(which is often quite a bit more). - Singles fair substantially worse than do married
dependent partners with deceased breadwinning
partners.
15The Importance of Social Security Income to the
Elderly
- 2/3 get more than half of their income from
Social Security. - Private pensions only account for 20 of elderly
income. - For low-income persons, Social Security is 80 of
their monthly income. - More than 50 of the elderly would be below the
poverty line without Social Security.
16Cost-of-Living Adjustments
- Benefits are adjusted for inflation using the
CPI. - Because the CPI overstates inflation (by
estimates in the neighborhood of 1.1 percentage
points), Social Security benefits increase in
real terms each year.
17Demographic Changes
- Birthrates have fallen such that the number of
workers supporting each retiree has fallen from
more than 30 in the 1950s to below 5 beginning in
1990. Projections show that fewer than 3 workers
will support each retiree by 2030 shortly
thereafter, fewer than 2 workers will support
each retiree.
18Algebraic Look at the Result of Demographic
Changes Under a Pay-as-You-Go system
- t (B R)/(W L)
- Where
- t is total benefits paid
- B is the average benefit
- R is the number of recipients
- W is taxable wages
- L is the number of workers
19Algebraic rearranging
- t B/W R/L the average replacement rate
the dependency ratio - The dependency ratio was below .1 it is
currently above .3 and is steadily increasing,
and will be at .5 in 2030.
20(No Transcript)
21Proposals to Reform Social Security
- Maintain benefits
- Increase taxability of benefits
- Invest Trust Fund in Corporate Securities
- Eventually increase payroll tax rate by 1.6
percentage points - Individual Accounts
- Raise retirement age
- Reduce replacement rates for upper income people
- Allow 1.6 percent of payroll to be placed in
special retirement accounts - Personal Security Accounts
- Allow half of payroll taxes to be placed in
individually managed accounts - Reduce guaranteed benefit
22Figure 8.2 Social Security Pensions and the
Work-Leisure Choice
23Working While Eligible for Social Security
Benefits
- People may work and receive Social Security
benefits. - If they receive benefits with the reduced
benefits option at age 62, they lose 1 in
benefits for every 2 they earn over
approximately 10,000. - Those older than 65 may earn any amount and keep
their benefits. - If they choose not to receive benefits, they
receive a greater Social Security benefit when
they decide to begin receiving them.
24Savings Incentives of Social Security
- Asset Substitution Effect People save less than
they would if Social Security did not exist,
because they are substituting government promises
of a benefit for private savings. Stated simply,
people save less because government is saving
for them. - Induced Retirement Effect People save more than
they would if Social Security did not exist
because they would not have retired or would not
have retired as early had Social Security not
been there. Given that it does exist, people
choose to ultimately retire or retire earlier and
save in order to do so. - Bequest Effect People save more than they would
have if Social Security did not exist in order to
bequeath more to their children and
grandchildren.
25Figure 8.3 The Asset Substitution Effect
26The Net Effect of Social Security on Savings
- Feldstein Social Security leads to a substantial
reduction in savings - Munnell The net effect of the ASE, BE, and IRE
is nearly zeroÂ
27Medicare
- The program provides substantially subsidized
health insurance to those 65 and older. It is
financed with premiums, a 2.9 payroll tax (1.45
each for employers and employees) and general
government revenue. - Part A
- Mandatory
- Covers hospitalization
- Financed with payroll tax and premiums
- Part B
- Voluntary
- Covers doctors visits
- Financed from general federal revenue and
premiums
28Unemployment Insurance
- Covers nearly all full-time workers
- Financed with a payroll tax on employers up to
7000 of earnings - Gross Replacement Rate 33Â