Here's How Long Congress Has Known Social Security Was in Trouble

The latest snapshot from the Social Security Administration shows what we've known for a very long time: Americans, young and predominantly old, are pretty reliant on Social Security. Each and every month, roughly 62 million people receive a benefit check, with approximately 70% of these recipients being older beneficiaries. Of these retired workers, 62% lean on the program to provide at least half of their monthly income.

Yet for as important as Social Security has been for almost eight decades -- payouts began in 1940 -- America's key social program is about to face its toughest test to date.

Dice lying next to a piece of paper that reads, Will Your Social Security Be Enough?
Dice lying next to a piece of paper that reads, Will Your Social Security Be Enough?

Image source: Getty Images.

Trouble is brewing for America's most important social program

According to the recently released annual report from the Social Security Board of Trustees, the program is set to undergo a major transformation this year. For the first time in more than 35 years, the Trustees are estimating that more will be paid out in benefits than collected in revenue.

Mind you, paying out an estimated $1.7 billion more in benefits than revenue collected isn't a big deal when there's approximately $2.9 trillion in excess cash, which is invested in special-issue bonds and certificates of indebtedness, earning interest. But the bigger issue is that this net cash outflow, with a minor exception in 2019, is expected to grow in size with each passing year. By 2027, $169 billion more could be paid out than is collected, based on the intermediate-cost model.

How have we gotten to this point, you ask? Part of the blame does have to do with changing demographics. The ongoing retirement of baby boomers from the workforce is weighing down the worker-to-beneficiary ratio, and life expectancies have been lengthening on a pretty steady basis over many decades, allowing seniors to pull a benefit from Social Security for an extended period of time.

However, this is a problem that's also the result of growing income inequality, record-low interest rates, and even congressional inaction.

Senior man with a scowl on his face.
Senior man with a scowl on his face.

Image source: Getty Images.

Social Security's survival isn't in question -- but its payout sustainability is

With Social Security's $2.9 trillion in asset reserves expected to dwindle beginning in 2018, the Trustees suggest (again, based on the intermediate-cost model) that this excess cash will be completely gone by 2034.

What does that mean? On one hand, it doesn't mean the end for Social Security. Though having no excess cash would eliminate the interest income that generated $85.1 billion for the program in 2017, the 12.4% payroll tax on earned income above $128,400, as of 2018, provides the bulk of funding (87.7% in 2017), and the taxation of benefits is expected to deliver more in revenue with each passing year. In short, revenue will be collected, and eligible beneficiaries will still get a check. Social Security will be there for you when you retire, so if you're eligible, don't let anyone tell you otherwise.