Before you write that Social Security is bankrupt….
COMMENTARY | April 19, 2012
Two ardent defenders of Social Security offer some context to
reporters on the upcoming release of the 2012 Social Security Trustees
Report, hoping to offset scary and unfounded headlines.
By Nancy Altman and Eric Kingson
The most important take-away points from the 2012 Trustees Report
will be that Social Security has a large and growing surplus; that
without any Congressional action, Social Security will continue to pay
benefits to America’s eligible working families for decades; and that
with modest legislated increases in revenue, it will continue to pay
those benefits for the next century and beyond.
Because the economic recovery and wage growth have been slower than
expected and the cost of living was higher, this year’s report is likely
to project that the number of years that Social Security can continue
to pay benefits in full with no Congressional action will be a year or
two shorter. But it is still decades away -- and the precise year has
fluctuated in virtually every Trustees Report, sometimes sooner,
sometimes later. The fluctuation is unsurprising given the uncertainties
related to projecting inflation, wage growth, productivity, immigration
rates, fertility rates, and other factors so far into the future.
Saturday, April 21, 2012
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