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The Social Security Administration Just Topped $1 Trillion in Spending for the First Time Ever

Social Security is widely considered to be the most important social program for our nation's retired workers. Each month, as of September 2017, nearly 42.2 million retired workers receives a check averaging about $1,372.

While that may not sound like a lot of money, it equates to at least half the monthly income for 62% of elderly beneficiaries and 90%, or more, of the monthly income for about a third of retirees. Put plainly, millions of retirees would probably be living in poverty without a guaranteed monthly stipend from Social Security.

Social Security just hit a milestone

However, these guaranteed payments add up over time. With baby boomers retiring at an average rate of more than 10,000 persons a day, and the average 65-year-old likely to live 20 more years according to data from the Social Security Administration (SSA), the amount the SSA is paying out annually is rapidly growing.

A Social Security card lumped in with a messy pile of cash.
A Social Security card lumped in with a messy pile of cash.

Image source: Getty Images.

While it may not come as a surprise to some folks, recently published monthly data from the U.S. Treasury Department showed that Social Security Administration spending topped the $1 trillion mark for the first time ever in fiscal 2017. The federal government's fiscal year begins on October 1 and ends on September 30 of the following year. Comparatively, the SSA only spent around $600 billion back in 1997.

Officially, SSA spending totaled $1,000,812,000,000 in 2017. This included $791.1 billion being paid to the retired workers and survivors, $143 billion being divvied out to those with disabilities, and $58.7 billion being parsed out to the Supplemental Security Income program. A few smaller expenses include about $4.5 billion in aggregate payments (i.e., adding the retired worker, survivor, and disability contributions together) to the Railroad Retirement Account, and nearly $6.4 billion in administrative expenses from managing retired worker, survivor, and disability claims and requests. You'll note that the SSA is one of the most cost-efficient federal programs, with expenses as a percentage of collected revenue often at or below 0.7%.

Social Security's spending is about to get out of control

Unfortunately, America's most important retirement program is about to see its spending seriously balloon in the decades to come.

As noted, millions of baby boomers are becoming eligible for benefits each year, and there simply aren't enough new workers to take their places in terms of revenue generation. This, coupled with lengthening life expectancies, is expected to significantly weigh on Social Security.