A slow-moving
crisis is approaching for Social Security, threatening to undermine a
central pillar in the retirement of tens of millions of Americans.
Next year, for the first time since 1982,
the program must start drawing down its assets in order to pay retirees
all of the benefits they have been promised, according to the latest government projections.
Unless
a political solution is reached, Social Security’s so-called trust
funds are expected to be depleted within about 15 years. Then, something
that has been unimaginable for decades would be required under current
law: Benefit checks for retirees would be cut by about 20 percent across
the board.
“Old people not getting
the Social Security checks they have been promised? That has been
unthinkable in America — and I don’t think it will really happen in the
end this time, because it’s just too horrible,” said Alicia Munnell, the
director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. “But
action has to be taken to prevent it.”
While the issue is certain to be
politically contentious, it is barely being talked about in Washington
and at 2020 campaign events. The last time Social Security faced a
crisis of this kind, in the early 1980s, a high-level bipartisan effort
was needed to keep retirees’ checks whole. Since that episode, the
program has often been called
“the third rail of American politics” — an entitlement too dangerous to
touch — and it’s possible that another compromise could be reached in
the current era.
Benefit cuts would be devastating for about half
of retired Americans, who rely on Social Security for most of their
retirement income. A survey released in May by the Federal Reserve found
that a quarter of working Americans had saved nothing for retirement.
Social Security
has a long-known basic math problem: more money will be going out than
coming in. Roughly 10,000 baby boomers are retiring each day, with
insufficient numbers of younger people entering the work force to pay
into the system and support them.
And life expectancy is increasing. By 2035, Social Security estimates,
the number of Americans 65 or older will increase to more than 79
million, from about 49 million now. If the program has not been
repaired, they will encounter a much poorer Social Security than the one
seniors rely on today.
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