Reliance on Social Security is especially high among the oldest— those who can no longer work and may have outlived their savings — and elderly blacks and Hispanics. Without Social Security, nearly half of elderly Americans would live below the official poverty level; instead, fewer than 10 percent do.
But Social Security isn’t just for the elderly. It protects workers who suffer a severe medical impairment, and children whose breadwinner dies, retires, or becomes disabled. We estimate that in 2011 — the latest year for which we have data — it lifted more than 21 million Americans of all ages above the official poverty line.
Social Security benefits are modest. The average retired worker or elderly widow collects less than $1,300 a month, and disabled workers even less. Nobody gets rich from Social Security: only 9 percent of retired workers get more than $2,000 a month (and a minuscule 1 percent get more than $2,500). Social Security benefits are low by international standards, too.
With the continued decline of the traditional defined-benefit pension, Social Security is the only retirement income most Americans will collect that’s indexed to inflation and guaranteed to last as long as they live. And because it’s not means-tested, Social Security encourages people to supplement their retirement income by working part-time or by saving money.
Social Security faces a long-term shortfall that’s predictable and manageable. Those who fear that Social Security won’t be around when today’s young workers retire misunderstand the trustees’ projections. Even if policymakers did nothing, the program could still pay three-quarters of scheduled benefits after the trust funds run out in 2033.
Social Security is the most effective and successful income-security program in the nation’s history. The President and Congress should design reforms judiciously so that it remains that way.
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