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103 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2000)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0100 and id is 1 raw text is: April 4, 2000 No. 103
EARNINGS TEST REFORM ONLY
PART OF WHAT'S NEEDED
Congress is widely reported to have voted to
repeal the Social Security earnings test for workers

age 65 through 69, while
leaving in place the even
more   onerous  test  for
workers age 62 through 64.
(Those over age 70 are not
subject to the test.) In fact,
Congress voted to repeal the
test for workers at or above
the  normal retirement
age.      The   normal
retirement age is rising in
stages to 66 and 67 (to age
66 at the rate of two months
a year for people turning 62
between 2000 and 2005; to
67 for people reaching 62
between 2017 and 2022).
Within a few years, people
ages 65 and 66 will be
subject to the earnings test
again.
If Congress meant to
spare people age 65 and
above from the earnings test,
it should have specified
repeal as of age 65, not as of

age. The added benefit outlays would be small
and would be largely offset by tax revenue as more
people work. Static scoring, of course, doesn't take
such offsets into account.
In fact, as the retirement age rises under old
law, future 65 and 66 year-olds will face a stricter
earnings test than their predecessors.  Under
current law, workers at or above the normal
retirement age lose $1 in benefits for every $3 over
a fairly high earnings threshold ($17,000 in 2000),
an implicit 33-1/3%  add-on tax on wages.
Beneficiaries age 62 up to the normal retirement
age (currently, workers ages 62 through 64, soon to
be 65, and eventually 66) lose $1 in benefits for
every $2 in earnings over a lower threshold
($10,800 in 2000), an implicit 50% add-on tax.

Therefore, as normal

Congress is widely reported to have
voted to repeal the Social Security
earnings test for workers age 65
through 69, hile leaving in place the
even more onerous testfor workers age
62 through 64.... In faict, Congress
voted to repeal the test for workers at
or above the normal retirement age'
The normal retirement age is rising in
stages to 66 and 67 ... Within a few
years, people ages 65 and 66  ill be
subject to the earnings test again.
If Congress meant to spare people
age 65 and above from the earnings
test, it should have sp~ecified repeal as
o f age 65, not as of normnal
retirement age.

normal retirement

retirement age rises, 65 and
66 year-olds will face the
more restrictive version of
the test now   applied  to
younger retirees. The test
will remain an enormous
disincentive to work.   It
should  be   scrapped  for
workers   below    normal
retirement age too.
Apologists   for  the
earnings test claim that it
doesn't  discourage  work
because lost  benefits are
restored     when     the
beneficiaries  subsequently
work less than the thresh-
olds or reach the age at
which the earnings test does
not apply (age 70 now,
normal retirement age under
the bill). But that is true
only if the beneficiaries
live long enough.    Lost
benefits are restored over the
beneficiaries'  remaining

average expected lifetimes. Affected workers who

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

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.W., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 e Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www. ret.org

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