Building an Economy that Works for Everyone

The simple Social Security fix no one wants to talk about

One change could eliminate the long-term shortfall, promote tax equity and allow a modest benefit increase now

The 2012 Social Security Trustees’ Report shows the nation’s most important and popular social insurance system is on sound financial footing for at least another generation. With $2.7 trillion in its trust fund, Social Security can pay full benefits through 2033.

After 2033, the program can still pay 75% of benefits, even with no action by Congress. And because of how Social Security calculates benefits, that “75%” of benefits in 2033 will be about the same (in inflation-adjusted dollars) as benefits today.

But America can do better than that. Under the “Scrap the Cap” plan, Social Security can pay 100% of benefits after 2033, and even modestly expand benefits today, if Congress makes one simple change: eliminate Social Security’s cap on taxable income (now set at $110,100) so high income earners pay the same tax rate as middle class workers.

Eliminating Social Security’s cap on taxable income (now set at $110,100) means
high income earners would pay the same tax rate as middle class workers

The additional funding could boost benefits for low-income earners, add credits for individuals (often women) who take time from work to raise their family, and restore benefits for college students that were cut in the 1980’s.

“These improvements immediately boost the American economy, build economic security for women, and safeguard educational opportunities for young people who have suffered the loss of a parent,” according to Marilyn Watkins, policy director for the Economic Opportunity Institute.

Social Security benefits are more critical to American economic security than ever. According to estimates, nearly one-half of Americans will be unable to maintain their standard of living in old age. About 1 in 4 Washington households – more than 1 million Washingtonians, including 73,000 children – received old age, survivor, or disability benefits from Social Security in December 2010.

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