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Social Security's Funding Shortfall


Updated May 5, 2020


Social Security provides monthly cash benefits to retired or
disabled workers, their family members, and family
members of deceased workers. Many people of all ages
have some connection to the program, including an
estimated 178 million covered workers and approximately
64.5 million beneficiaries in 2020.

The program's income and outgo are accounted for with the
Social Security trust funds. They represent funds dedicated
to pay current and future Social Security benefits. In 2019,
the program had total income of $1,062 billion (92.4% from
dedicated tax revenues), total expenditures of $1,059 billion
(98.9% for benefit payments), and trust fund reserves of
$2.9 trillion (U.S. Treasury securities) available for future
program spending. Under the 2020 intermediate
assumptions, the Social Security Board of Trustees project,
with these asset reserves, the trust funds to remain solvent
until 2035 (the 2020 intermediate assumptions reflect the
trustees' understanding of Social Security at the start of
2020; it does not include potential effects of the
Coronavirus Disease 2019, or COVID-19). That is, until
that time, the trust funds are projected to be able to pay full
benefits scheduled under current law on a timely basis. In
2035, however, the trust fund reserves are projected to be
depleted. While the program would continue to operate
with scheduled tax revenues, those revenues are projected
to cover about 79% of scheduled benefits through the end
of the projection period (2094). It is unclear how the U.S.
Treasury would handle the payment of scheduled benefits
under such a scenario.

Social Security's projected long-range funding shortfall is
driven largely by demographic factors. Declines in fertility
and increases in longevity result in a lower ratio of workers
to beneficiaries (projections show the ratio of workers
paying into the system to support each beneficiary is
estimated to fall from 2.8 in 2018 to 2.3 in 2035). Changes
to Social Security have long been an issue of interest to
Congress from a trust fund solvency perspective. Policy
proposals to address Social Security's projected funding
shortfall typically include a combination of revenue
increases and benefit adjustments. Although the process of
selecting specific program changes would likely involve
intense debate in Congress, policymakers generally agree
that taking legislative action sooner rather than later could
mitigate the effects on workers and beneficiaries and allow
people as much time as possible to adjust to the changes.

       ,o    ,ch., dS,.
Social Security is a self-financing program. Of its total
income, 92.4% is from dedicated tax revenues: (1) payroll
taxes paid by employers, employees, and self-employed
individuals; and (2) federal income taxes paid by about half
of beneficiaries on a portion of their benefits. The program


also receives interest income on the asset reserves held by
the Social Security trust funds (7.6%) and a small amount
(less than 1%) of other income (including reimbursements
from the U.S. Treasury's general fund).

Social Security coverage is nearly universal, with an
estimated 93% of all workers participating in the system in
2020. The Social Security payroll tax rate is 12.4%, divided
evenly between the worker and the employer; the tax is
applied to the worker's earnings up to an annual limit
($137,700 in 2020). Any covered earnings above the annual
limit are not subject to the Social Security payroll tax and
are not counted in the worker's benefit computation. Social
Security benefits are intended to replace part of a worker's
earnings. As such, a worker's benefit is based on his or her
career-average earnings in covered employment (i.e.,
earnings subject to the Social Security payroll tax) and a
progressive benefit formula that is intended to provide
adequate benefit levels for workers with low career-average
earnings.


               Issue Before Congress
 Over its 85-yeazr history, Social Security has collected $23.0
   trillion and pa id out $20.1 trillion, lea-ving trust fund asset
   reserves of $2.9 trillion.
*   Projections show th-at Social Security will be unable to pay
    scheduled benefits in full an d on time starting in 2035,
    priimarily due to d emogra phic factors.

    Wht % Socia Pet it rojected

For many years, Social Security collected more tax
revenues than needed to pay benefits, resulting in the
accumulation of trust fund asset reserves (held in the form
of interest-bearing U.S. Treasury securities) available for
future program spending. Starting in 2010, however, Social
Security's total expenditures began to exceed noninterest
income (i.e., cash-flow deficits emerged), requiring the
program to draw on trust fund reserves to pay scheduled
benefits. The trustees project that Social Security will
continue to run cash-flow deficits throughout the 75-year
projection period (2020-2094) and that annual cash-flow
deficits will grow markedly over time. For example, the
program's cash-flow deficit was $78 billion in 2019 and is
projected to be $460 billion in 2034 (constant 2020 dollars).
(2020 Social Security Trustees Report, intermediate
assumptions.)

In 2021, Social Security's cost is projected to exceed total
income (i.e., tax revenues plus interest income). Trust fund
reserves are projected to decline steadily from their peak of
$2.9 trillion to zero in 2035. Following the depletion of
trust fund reserves, scheduled tax revenues are projected to


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