Two recent developments have placed the financial status of older Americans in sharper focus. One development was a report from trustees for Social Security and Medicare. In 2020, Social Security revenue will be insufficient to pay benefits, requiring the fund to dip into its reserves for the first time since 1982. By 2035, the reserves will be depleted unless steps are taken to shore up Social Security. Beginning that year, according to projections, Social Security benefits would need to be reduced to the level of payroll tax receipts. Medicare is expected to exhaust its reserves in 2026.
After the previous occasion when the Social Security Administration had to dip into reserves to pay benefits (1982), Congress and the President worked together to shore up the fund. The payroll tax rate was increased, benefits became taxable to some recipients, and a program was put in place to gradually increase the eligibility age for full benefits. The tax rate was raised a couple more times, most recently in 1990. That was almost 30 years ago!
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