Nearly 1.5 million Washingtonians rely on Social Security income to make ends meet. However, Gen X Americans begin retiring in the mid-2030s and will be the first generation that may suffer from Social Security’s long-term financial challenge. Their retirement security and those of subsequent generations, including our children and grandchildren, are at stake.
Today’s Social Security checks are paid for by the money that regularly comes from workers’ paychecks (listed as “FICA” taxes) and the interest income on the money those payments have built up in the Security Trust Funds. For decades before 2021, Social Security collected more in FICA taxes and interest than it paid out, so it built up a surplus to help support the retirement of the baby boomer generation.
Today that surplus is being used to supplement incoming payroll tax income, but according to current estimates, the Trust Funds will face a shortfall in 2034. When that happens, Social Security will only be able to pay around 83% of the benefits.
When the trust funds run out of money, Congress is responsible for addressing the shortfall.
Congress can choose to cover the gap by raising taxes, cutting benefits or finding new funding sources. While any solution could involve any or all of these changes to the program, here is a brief list of some of the commonly discussed options Congress might consider:
Eliminate or raise the wage cap: Social Security taxes are only paid on the first $168,600 of wage earnings in 2024. Any earnings above this amount are not subject to the Social Security payroll tax. Various proposals would help close the shortfall by either removing this cap altogether or setting it higher so those with bigger paychecks pay a larger portion of their income into Social Security.
Increase the payroll tax rate: Employees and employers each pay a 6.2% payroll tax on the first $168,600 of annual wages to Social Security. This is part of the FICA tax on your paycheck. One way to help close the Social Security funding gap would be to increase the 6.2% payroll tax on all employees and employers.
Use other funding: By law, Social Security is primarily self-funded, which means its funding comes from the Social Security payroll tax. Congress does not use general revenues – the money we pay in income and other taxes – to pay Social Security benefits.
Proposals include:
Raise the full retirement age: The current full retirement age is 67 years old for people who turn 62 in 2024. Many Americans are living and working longer. One option would raise the full retirement age to anywhere from 68 to 70. Most proposals to raise the age phase this change over time and seek to protect those currently at or near retirement from any increase in the retirement age. Most proposals would keep the early claiming age of 62.
Reduce benefits for the upper income: Social Security is set up so that while people with lower wages throughout their careers receive lower benefits, they get a larger amount of their contributions back in retirement than those with higher incomes.
Some proposals would change the benefit formula to return even less money to those who earned more during their lifetimes. Other proposals would base the person’s benefit on their income and/or assets at retirement instead of what they paid into the system during their career.
These are just some of the leading options regularly put forward. No individual option is expected to fix the Social Security shortfall. Republicans, Democrats and Independents need to work together on a package of options to protect benefits and address Social Security’s long-term financial challenge.
The president and Congress must agree on a bipartisan solution to ensure current and future generations get the money they’ve earned.
If you would like to stay up to date on AARP’s efforts to hold Congress accountable and protect Social Security, go to: aarp.org/YouEarnedIt.
Cathy MacCaul is the advocacy director for AARP Washington.