The future of Social Security remains a looming question for millions of Americans who count on those benefits in retirement. If President Joe Biden wins a second term, his administration will face mounting pressure to make changes for the future of the Social Security program. Substantial reforms may be necessary to ensure the program remains available for generations to come.
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Current projections suggest that Social Security will run dry by 2034, which means that hard choices may be needed to shore up the program’s finances. The decisions made during a potential Biden second term could dramatically reshape Social Security for both current and future retirees.
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A ‘Means Test’ for Benefits
Aaron Cirksena, founder and CEO of MDRN Capital, suggested that one potential change that Biden could implement would be “a potential way to means test Social Security benefits for higher net worth people.”
This would mean reduced monthly checks for higher net-worth retirees, while preserving more generous benefits for lower and middle-income seniors. It would mark a big change from Social Security’s current policy of providing the same benefits (in terms of percentages) to all retirees, regardless of their wealth.
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Addressing the Long-Term Crisis
Of course, Biden may have to take even bolder action to address Social Security’s looming problem of dwindling funds.
The Social Security Administration’s latest projections indicate that the program’s funds will be depleted by 2034, at which point incoming payroll taxes will only be sufficient to cover approximately 77% of scheduled benefits. There simply won’t be enough to go around.
“It should be clear, however, that Social Security will not run out in 2034,” said Cirksena. “It simply won’t have enough new money coming in to meet the obligations. There will always be new money flowing into Social Security.”
Changes to Retirement Age
The first approach Cirksena said Biden might try to implement would be raising the age at which full retirement benefits are available from Social Security.
“Raising retirement age for younger workers is the obvious solution,” said Cirksena.
While politically contentious, this could help the program’s resources last longer, as well as account for increasing life expectancies.