It’s good to look at our demographics to understand our
Social Security liabilities and they seem to be in order. The “baby-boomers”
seem to be tinning out and groupings of younger generations seem to be
balanced.
US Population by Age
0-18 24%
19-25 9%
26-34 12%
35-54 26%
55-64 13%
65+ 15%
https://www.kff.org/other/state-indicator/distribution-by-age/?currentTimeframe=0&sortModel=%7B%22colId%22:%22Location%22,%22sort%22:%22asc%22%7D
The chart above should combine the 19-25 year olds with the
26-34 year olds and should read:
US Population by Age
0-18 24%
19-34 21% (combined)
35-54 26%
55-64 13%
65-100+ 15%
This gives us a better idea of the demographics that drive
Social Security costs. We have 24%
children, 21% millennials, 26% GenXers and 28% retired or approaching
retirement.
The shortfall is about income. The retirement age group
earned a lot more money in a much better economy since 1945. This was the best educated, most productive,
most prosperous generation.
The GenX group survived, but too many made too little. The millennials really suffered with minimum
wage jobs. The childrens’ group will probably earn more than the
millennials.
Many US citizens work past age 65, especially if they are
self-employed. 50% of Americans are “healthy” at all ages and this group could
work until age 70 easily. Some Social Security recipients signed up at age 62.
Most signed up at age 66. Many die before age 66, but half of their Social
Security goes to their surviving spouses.
Previous fixes to Social Security came from raising the
eligibility age from 65 to 66 and raising the wage cap to $128.400. Both of
these could be raised. Social Security can be reform is already in the law.
Currently, the
full benefit age is 66 years and
2 months for people born in 1955, and it will gradually rise to 67 for those born in 1960 or later. Early
retirement benefits will continue to be available at age 62, but they will be reduced more. Even Greece is
raising the eligibility age for their retirement pension to age 67.
The real problem with Social Security is that is a Ponzi
scheme and a “defined benefit” plan. It would have been better if the law had
authorized individually owned accounts that beneficiaries could have invested.
Before Social Security, the elderly simply lived with their
kids. Now the kids live with the
elderly.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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