Within 50 years, unless there are dramatic changes to Social Security... including radically changing the retirement age well up into the 80's and cutting off benefits to anyone who saves up thier own retirement, the "promise" of social security will be little more than a bad joke. It has a 100% chance of failure.
If we project the age and demographic changes of our country from the past into the future, by the year 2050, there will be 1 person collecting SS checks for each 2 people paying taxes into the fund. When the program was started, about 1 in 10 people actually lived long enough to collect benefits, and generally only for a few months to a couple years. At that time, there were 22 payers for each collector.
At present, there are between 5 and 6 taxpayers for each collector, and as we all know, the it continues to slip. Presently, the taxes that fund SS amount to 17% of our gross earnings. Your employer is required to hide half of it from you by paying the government before he pays you, but you're still having to earn it anyway. When this ratio falls from the nearly 6 down to just 3, which is expected in about 20 years, there will not only be proportionately more people reaching SS age, there will be more people living longer on it. It's expected at that time that benefits will cost 1/2 of your gross earnings. And, if present trends hold, your income taxes and state taxes will tack on another 35% of your gross earnings, leaving you just 15% to live on.
"What???" you say, "I can't live on 15% of my earnings!!!". Of course not. This information is widely known, actually, and any financial analyst can find the trends and make projections into the future with pretty decent accuracy.
The fact is, it has NEVER been possible to fund the retirements of the public by redistributing the earnings of the working. France, for instance, has less than 2 people working, for each person collecting some kind of money. But the French are on the train wreck now. Thier national debt and continuing deficits, along with an inability to get unemployment below double digits will eventually bankrupt the economy or else cause the currency to fail. Just a couple years ago, France was teetered on the edge of complete collapse and was rescued temporarily, but continues to drift toward the same conclusion.
Every time some politician accuses others of "taking away" social security or that he/she is "saving" or trying to "save" it, they are flat out lying. It is impossible to "save" it in it's present form. The numbers prove it. But for those who've staked thier political future upon this dead horse, those facts are mighty inconvenient.
If we project the age and demographic changes of our country from the past into the future, by the year 2050, there will be 1 person collecting SS checks for each 2 people paying taxes into the fund. When the program was started, about 1 in 10 people actually lived long enough to collect benefits, and generally only for a few months to a couple years. At that time, there were 22 payers for each collector.
At present, there are between 5 and 6 taxpayers for each collector, and as we all know, the it continues to slip. Presently, the taxes that fund SS amount to 17% of our gross earnings. Your employer is required to hide half of it from you by paying the government before he pays you, but you're still having to earn it anyway. When this ratio falls from the nearly 6 down to just 3, which is expected in about 20 years, there will not only be proportionately more people reaching SS age, there will be more people living longer on it. It's expected at that time that benefits will cost 1/2 of your gross earnings. And, if present trends hold, your income taxes and state taxes will tack on another 35% of your gross earnings, leaving you just 15% to live on.
"What???" you say, "I can't live on 15% of my earnings!!!". Of course not. This information is widely known, actually, and any financial analyst can find the trends and make projections into the future with pretty decent accuracy.
The fact is, it has NEVER been possible to fund the retirements of the public by redistributing the earnings of the working. France, for instance, has less than 2 people working, for each person collecting some kind of money. But the French are on the train wreck now. Thier national debt and continuing deficits, along with an inability to get unemployment below double digits will eventually bankrupt the economy or else cause the currency to fail. Just a couple years ago, France was teetered on the edge of complete collapse and was rescued temporarily, but continues to drift toward the same conclusion.
Every time some politician accuses others of "taking away" social security or that he/she is "saving" or trying to "save" it, they are flat out lying. It is impossible to "save" it in it's present form. The numbers prove it. But for those who've staked thier political future upon this dead horse, those facts are mighty inconvenient.