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60 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1997)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0057 and id is 1 raw text is: IET
April 28, 1997 No. 60
COLAS NOT THE CAUSE
OF SOCIAL SECURITY DEFICITS
Cost of living adjustments (COLAs) that are
slightly overstated by the much maligned Consumer

Social Security Trustees Report, life expectancy at
age 65 in 1997 is 15.6 years for men and 19.2 years
for women. The Report projects those figure to
reach 17.5 and 20.9 years, respectively, by 2040,
and 18.8 and 22.3 years, respectively, by 2075. A
larger group of retirees will live and draw benefits
16 to 20 percent longer than they do today.
The other source of the deficits is the Social
Security initial benefit formula. The initial benefit
formula sets the benefit check that a retiree receives
when he or she begins to draw benefits. The benefit
is based on a worker's earnings history - the
income on which he or she paid social security
taxes over the years. Those yearly earnings are
adjusted for wage growth, averaged, and subjected
to a complex formula that determines each person's

Price Index are not the source
of Social Security's looming
deficits, and fixing the CPI and
the COLAs will not save
Social   Security    from
impending collapse.
There are two real culprits
leading to the projected Social
Security deficits. One is an
adverse demographic shift as

There are two real culprits leading
to the projected Social Security
deficits.  One is an     adverse
demographic shift ais the baby
boom r-etires, life expectancy rises,
and the population ages.

initial monthly benefit check.
The initial benefit formula is
independent of the subsequent
cost of living adjustments that
protect the initial benefit from
subsequent     inflation.
Consequently, changes in the
COLAs have little impact on
the initial benefits that future
generations will receive. (See
note.)

the baby boom retires, life expectancy rises, and the
population ages. Currently there are 3.3 workers
paying into the system for each retiree drawing

benefits. That ratio will fall to
3 workers per retiree by 2010,
2.0 workers per retiree by
2030, and to 1.8 workers per
retiree by 2070. The decline
in the ratio stems in part from
the impending retirement of
the post-World War II baby
boom generation, which will
be followed into the work
force  by  the   baby   bust
generation.

The initial benefit formula is designed to keep

benefits growing

in line with income, generation
after generation, no matter how
much income grows over time.
The replacement rates (initial
benefits upon retirement as a
percent  of   pre-retirement
income) are   kept constant
across all future generations -
at about 56% for low wage
workers, 42%    for average
wage workers, and 27% for
upper income workers. (See
table.)

Exacerbating the population shift is a continuing
increase in life expectancy. According to the 1997

Per capita real income is projected to roughly
double over the next 75 years. Consequently, per

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

The other sou-ce of the deficits is
the Social Security initial benefit
fiolm a....  [Pier  capita  real
benefits at the normal retirement
age are ... projected to roughly
double  under- curr-ent benefit
fiormulia ruldes between 1997 and
2075.

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 e Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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