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Updated  May  10, 2023


Social Security Trust Fund Investment Practices


Background
Social Security is a self-financing program that provides
monthly  cash benefits to retired or disabled workers, and to
the eligible family members of retired, disabled, or
deceased workers. There are over 66 million beneficiaries
in 2023.

Workers  gain benefit eligibility for themselves and their
family members  by working in jobs covered by Social
Security, among other requirements. An estimated 183
million workers (94% of all workers in 2023) are covered
by Social Security. Covered workers and their employers
must pay Social Security payroll taxes, which are the
program's primary source of income. The program  also
receives income from the federal income taxes that some
beneficiaries pay on a portion of their benefits. Together,
these dedicated tax revenues represent 94.6% of Social
Security's total income.

Social Security operates with a trust fund financing
mechanism.  The Social Security trust funds are accounts
within the U.S. Treasury that (1) track income and
expenditures for the program and (2) hold the accumulated
assets for the program. As such, they represent funds
dedicated to pay current and future Social Security benefits.
(There are two separate trust funds: the Old-Age and
Survivors Insurance [OASI] Trust Fund and the Disability
Insurance [DI] Trust Fund. They are referred to here on a
combined  basis as the Social Security trust funds.)

As required by law, Social Security tax revenues are
invested in interest-bearing U.S. government obligations.
Currently, the trust funds hold about $2.83 trillion in U.S.
Treasury securities. In 2022, the trust fund holdings earned
approximately $66.4 billion in interest, representing 5.4%
of Social Security's total income.

In the past, attention has focused on alternative investment
practices in an effort to increase the interest earnings of the
trust funds, among other goals. This In Focus explains
current Social Security trust fund investment practices.

The   Trust Funds
Section 201 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. §401)
requires the managing trustee of the Social Security trust
funds (the Secretary of the Treasury) to invest Social
Security tax revenues in special nonmarketable federal
public-debt obligations called special issues (i.e., securities
available only to the trust funds, not to the general public).
The Secretary may invest in marketable federal securities,
which are available to the general public, if that is
determined to be in the public interest.

The Social Security tax revenues that are exchanged for the
U.S. government  obligations go into the general fund of the


U.S. Treasury, and they are indistinguishable from all other
revenues in the general fund. Social Security benefits and
administrative expenses are also paid from the general fund
of the U.S. Treasury. When Social Security payments are
made  from the general fund, an equal amount of U.S.
government  obligations are redeemed from the Social
Security trust funds.


                      Key  Points
    Social Security is a self-financing program, with 94.6% of its
     total 2022 income from dedicated tax revenues.
    Social Security tax revenues are invested in interest-bearing
     U.S. government obligations held by the Social Security
     trust funds, as required by law.
    Trust fund holdings-about $2.83 trillion in U.S. Treasury
     securities in 2022-represent funds dedicated to pay
     current and future Social Security benefits.
    The effective interest rate earned on all obligations held by
     the trust funds in 2022 was 2.4%; the average interest rate
     on new special issues was 3.0%.
    The trust funds earned approximately $66.4 billion in
     interest in 2022, representing 5.4% of Social Security's total
     income.


The holdings of the Social Security trust funds represent the
amount  of money that the U.S. Treasury's general fund
owes  to the Social Security trust funds. There is no separate
pool of cash set aside for Social Security purposes.
However,  that is not to say that the holdings of the Social
Security trust funds are not real assets. The U.S.
government  obligations purchased by the trust funds are
backed by the full faith and credit of the United States and
guaranteed with respect to both principal and interest by the
United States, as specified in Section 201(d) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. §401(d)).

Stated another way, the holdings of the Social Security trust
funds (the asset reserves) represent the accumulated total of
surplus Social Security tax revenues collected for the
program  over the years, plus the interest earned on
securities held by the trust funds. Over its 88-year history,
the program has collected $26.40 trillion and paid out
$23.57 trillion, leaving trust fund reserves of about $2.83
trillion available for future program spending. As long as
the trust funds have a sufficient balance, they represent the
authority and an obligation for the U.S. Treasury to issue
benefit payments scheduled under current law.

From  2010 through 2020, Social Security relied on interest
income  to supplement current tax revenues to pay benefits
scheduled under current law. In 2021 and 2022, the
program  needed to redeem asset reserves held in the trust
funds. Those reserves are projected to be depleted in 2034

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