There's a 95% Chance Social Security's Asset Reserves Will Be Gone in the Next 12 to 25 Years

Few, if any, social programs shoulder the importance that Social Security does. Each and every month, more than 62 million people, many of whom are age 65 and over, receive a benefit check.

Of these aged beneficiaries, the Social Security Administration notes that 62% count on the program to provide at least half of their monthly income. Sixty-two percent! Suffice it to say, without the guaranteed monthly payout that the program has provided for the past 78 years, we'd likely be staring down an elderly poverty rate problem.

Unfortunately, the mere existence of Social Security may not be enough to avoid calamity for seniors in the years that lie ahead.

Social Security cards laid out on a table.
Social Security cards laid out on a table.

Image source: Getty Images.

Social Security's issues loom large

According to the newly released Social Security Board of Trustees report for 2018, America's most important social program is transforming before our eyes, whether we're ready for it or not. Beginning this year and for the first time in 36 years, Social Security will pay out more in benefits than it generates in revenue. Though this net cash outflow is only estimated at $1.7 billion using the intermediate-cost model, it's expected to really start accelerating in 2020 and beyond. Through 2027, approximately $700 billion of Social Security's $2.9 trillion in built-up asset reserves is expected to be gone.

What the heck is happening that's causing Social Security to be turned on its head? It's a combination of factors that includes the ongoing retirement of baby boomers, which is lowering the worker-to-beneficiary ratio, a steady lengthening of life expectancies over many decades, growing income inequality, and the inaction of Congress.

And don't think for a moment that the trouble ends with the short-range forecast (defined as 10 years by the Trustees). According to the long-range forecast (defined as 75 years), there's an estimated $13.2 trillion cash shortfall between 2034, the year where the program's asset reserves are expected to run out, and 2092.

Confidence is high that Social Security's excess cash will soon disappear

There's an important point to keep in mind when reviewing forecasts from the Trustees. Though they're very forthcoming with projections and data, they are, ultimately, only estimates. Laws change, demographics shift, immigration patterns adjust, and longevity, birth, and death rates can change. These factors, along with the health of the U.S. economy, can impact the outlook for Social Security.

A stochastic model examining the Trustees' confidence in Social Security's asset reserve depletion.
A stochastic model examining the Trustees' confidence in Social Security's asset reserve depletion.

Image source: The Social Security Board of Trustees 2018 report.