Investing Social Security Into the Stock Market Is a Dangerous Idea

Social Security, our nation's most treasured social program that's responsible for keeping more than 15 million seniors each month out of poverty, is in some pretty big trouble.

The clock is ticking

As you've probably heard by now, the annually released Social Security Board of Trustees report has predicted that the program would begin expending more money than it's bringing in very soon. The 2018 report incorrectly called for this to happen last year, but the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act appears to have staved off the inevitable, for at least one more year. However, the first three months of the year have not been as promising, with $9 billion in net cash outflows from the Social Security Trust Fund.

Red dice and casino chips lying atop Social Security cards.
Red dice and casino chips lying atop Social Security cards.

Image source: Getty Images.

With more money leaving the fund than is being collected, it's only a matter of time before the $2.89 trillion in net cash surpluses that Social Security has built up since its inception is gone. According to the Trustees, the year 2034 is pegged as the asset reserve exhaustion date, assuming Congress fails to act by generating more revenue, cutting long-term expenditures, or enacting some combination of the two. In short, in order to keep the program solvent, a 21% across-the-board benefit cut may be 15 years (or less) away.

To say there have been countless proposals to fix Social Security's estimate $13.2 trillion cash shortfall between 2034 and 2092 would be an understatement. But rarely, if ever, do these proposals cross party lines and attempt to find a middle ground, which is why so many introduced reform bills are dead on arrival in the House or Senate.

Should Social Security invest in the stock market?

However, one suggestion that consistently crops up is the idea of investing Social Security's asset reserves into the stock market. To be clear, this doesn't mean giving each individual access to an account with their payroll tax earnings to invest. This is known as a partial privatization of Social Security, and the idea was shot down during the mid-2000s. Rather, since the program is a social investment in future generations of retired workers, investing in the stock market would involve the federal government buying a basket of stocks with some or all of the money currently held in the program's asset reserves.

Why invest in the stock market, you ask? The simple answer is that it tends to perform very well over the long run, and it's returned an average of 7% a year historically, inclusive of dividend reinvestment, and when adjusted for inflation. That's far and away higher than the 2.85% average yield that Social Security's asset reserves are bringing in via special-issue bonds and certificates of indebtedness right now. By law, the Social Security Administration is required to invest in these special-issue income-generating financial instruments with the program's annual net cash surplus.