Thursday, December 15, 2011

Chronological History of Social Security Related Legislation

Chronological History of Social Security Related Legislation


Frequently Asked Questions


Related Sites

Program History


Historical Background and Development of Social Security


Historical Chronology


Text of the 1935 Social Security Act


Legislative Histories


Social Security Number History


Social Security Related Archives


Important Reports & Studies

Agency History

Organizational History


Commissioners of SSA

Social Security in the United States

Social Security (US)


Updated: Dec. 1, 2011
(For coverage of the debate over extending cuts in the Social Security payroll tax, click here.)
Since it was created by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1935, Social Security has been the centerpiece of the nation’s social contract, an intergenerational commitment to provide at least a subsistence income to the most vulnerable of citizens. It is not only the biggest government entitlement plan, comprising over 20 percent of the federal budget, but also the most universal and the most popular.
According to the Social Security Administration, in 2011 nearly 55 million Americans received $727 billion in Social Security benefits. The recipients are retirees and their dependents, underage survivors of deceased workers and the disabled, among others. The money for this colossal endeavor comes from payroll taxes (known as Federal Insurance Contributions Act taxes) on current workers and on their employers.
The future of Social Security has been disputed for decades; efforts to change it have failed so often that it has been called the “third rail’' of American politics. Shortly after being re-elected in 2004, President George W. Bush initiated a campaign to partially privatize the system in legislation that quickly died.
In 2010, the chairmen of a bipartisan panel appointed by President Obama proposed making Social Security solvent for 75 years by raising payroll taxes for the affluent and reducing future benefits, including slowly raising the retirement age for full benefits to 69 from 67 by 2075. But reflecting the subject’s political potency, the Republicans who took control of the House in 2011 steered clear of discussing cuts to Social Security, even as they laid out sweeping changes to Medicare and Medicaid.
Then in September 2011, the question moved to center stage in the Republican presidential campaign during the debates when Gov. Rick Perry of Texas blasted Social Security, calling it a “Ponzi scheme” — a criticism discussed at length in his 2010 book “Fed Up!” in which he assailed the system as a “failure.”
While there are some superficial similarities, it is ultimately a misleading exaggeration to describe Social Security as a Ponzi scheme. It is a pay-as-you-go program that faces a shortfall of roughly 25 percent when the Social Security Trust Fund is exhausted some time around 2036.
Forestalling a Shortfall
The chief question hanging over the system is the question of how demographics will shape its finances. In 1982, a bipartisan commission came up with a plan that forestalled an impending shortfall through a tax increase that also generated a significant surplus. This surplus was put into an off-budget account known as the Social Security trust fund and loaned to the federal government. Repayment of the loans would provide a cushion for the day when the retirement of the baby boom generation meant that the system was paying out more than it was taking in.
That threshold was reached in 2010, six years sooner than expected, as tax receipts fell during the recession that began in 2007.
In May 2011 the Social Security Administration estimated that when the program’s trust funds are exhausted, $6.5 trillion in additional money will be needed over a 75-year period — roughly $87 billion per year — to pay all scheduled benefits.

Creation of a Safety Net
Government pensions were pioneered in Germany by Bismark, and the idea spread across Europe in the late 19th century. By 1934, it was not hard to make the case for Social Security in the United States. The Great Depression had devastated employment, pensions, the stock market and savings. Many older Americans, and their beleaguered children with families of their own, found themselves suddenly and shockingly in economic free-fall.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law on Aug. 14, 1935, creating a social insurance program for retired workers over 65. Many other components of what is now thought of as Social Security, including disability coverage and medical benefits, were yet to come, but the act has remained the most enduring legacy of the New Deal.
Before the creation of Social Security, some Americans had private or state pensions, but most supported themselves into old age by working. The 1930 census, for example, found 58 percent of men over 65 still in the workforce; in contrast, by 2002, the figure was 18 percent.
The elderly also relied heavily on their families. “Children, friends and relatives have borne and still carry the major cost of supporting the aged,” the Committee on Economic Security, the Roosevelt administration panel that developed Social Security, reported in 1935. “Several of the state surveys have disclosed that from 30 to 50 percent of the people over 65 years of age were being supported in this way.”
The Depression swept this world away. Many of the elderly could no longer find work. Those who had been lucky enough to have a pension or some savings saw them disappear. And many who relied on their children saw them buckle under the strain.
Roosevelt sent his Social Security plan, which included unemployment insurance, to Congress in January 1935, and by August he was able to sign it into law. Some New Dealers chafed at its limits, but the law was widely seen as a moderate alternative to the more radical proposals — like a guaranteed minimum income for the elderly — that were stirring then from the grassroots.
The first Social Security check was mailed in 1940 to Ida May Fuller, a retired legal secretary in Ludlow, Vt. It was for $22.54.
Expansion of the Program
Even before the first monthly checks were issued, Congress in 1939 voted to expand the program by providing benefits for dependents of retirees, as well as for the survivors of workers who died in their productive years. This began the transformation of Social Security into a family insurance program.
In the 1950’s Social Security coverage was extended to groups not included in the original program: farm workers, domestic workers, self-employed people, members of the armed forces and some state and local government employees.
In 1956, Congress established a cash benefit program for disabled workers age 50 or older. In 1958, dependents of disabled workers became eligible for benefits, and in 1960, the age requirement was dropped.
The architects of Social Security considered including a health insurance program but deferred the idea for fear it might jeopardize approval of their other proposals. Not until 1965 did Congress establish such a program for the elderly. Medicare, which receives a portion of Social Security payroll taxes, was extended to cover disabled people in 1972.
For the neediest of the aged, blind and disabled, there is another program authorized by the Social Security Act: Supplemental Security Income, which is financed with general revenue, not with money from the Social Security trust fund.
Keeping Up With Inflation
The original Social Security legislation had not included an inflation adjustment, which meant benefits did not keep up with the cost of living. Congress finally increased benefits in 1950 and then continued to do so in fits and starts, sometimes faster than inflation, sometimes slower and usually in an election year. President Richard M. Nixon and a Democratic Congress brought some order to this process in 1972, by automatically tying benefits to the movement of an inflation index in the previous year, in what became as the COLA (cost of living adjustment).
The global slowdown that began in 2008 led oil prices to plunge and some other prices to come down. Overall prices dropped 2.1 percent in 2009, according to the relevant price index.
Forecasts by the Obama administration and the Congressional Budget Office indicate that Social Security beneficiaries will not receive any cost-of-living increase in 2010 or in 2011. The COLA is intended to preserve the purchasing power of Social Security, by increasing benefits to keep pace with consumer prices. However, even with benefits remaining as they were, 2010 will be the first year since at least the Nixon era that the buying power of an individual worker’s Social Security goes up.
Problems of Solvency?
In 2010, the system will pay out more in benefits than it receives in payroll taxes, an important threshold it was not expected to cross until at least 2016, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Stephen C. Goss, chief actuary of the Social Security Administration, said that while the Congressional projection would probably be borne out, the change would have no effect on benefits in 2010 and retirees would keep receiving their checks as usual.
The problem, he said, is that payments have risen more than expected during the downturn, because jobs disappeared and people applied for benefits sooner than they had planned. At the same time, the program’s revenue has fallen sharply, because there are fewer paychecks to tax.
Analysts have long tried to predict the year when Social Security would pay out more than it took in because they view it as a tipping point — the first step of a long, slow march to insolvency, unless Congress strengthens the program’s finances.
The long-term costs of Social Security present further problems for politicians, who are already struggling over how to reduce the nation’s debt. The national predicament echoes that of many European governments, which are facing market pressure to re-examine their commitments to generous pensions over extended retirements.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Social Security Cards Version History

Social Security Cards Version History   

DATE CHANGE IN SSN CARD
1936
 First version of SSN card. No form number and no revision date. The preprinted information on the card face was in blue ink with a Social Security Board seal (in a lighter shade of blue) in the center of card. The SSN was in red ink. The date of issue was typed on the card. Had a “stub” to type in the mailing address. (The stub was to be put away for safe keeping.) Left edge was perforated. The card had a curved header showing “Social Security Act.” Under the header was “account number.” Had preprinted legends “date of issue” and “employee's signature.” The instructions on the back were in black ink.

1937 – 1938
 Second version of SSN card. Same as the first version of the card. The stub had a centered legend “For Office Use Only.”

1938 – 1940
 Third version of SSN card. The card itself was the same as the prior version but there were some variations in the printings. In some printings the SSN was printed on the stub; in others it had to be typed on. In some printings the stub had pre-printed spaces for the NH's name and address.

First version of replacement SSN card. On the back of the card the form number was shown as “Form OA-702 DUP.” The card format was the same as the original SSN card except it was light green and had “DUPLICATE” printed diagonally across the face in red letters (green letters for those used by RRB). There was a Social Security Board seal in the middle of the card. The left margin was not perforated. The back of the RRB version showed only “RR” in large letters. The cards did not have a stub.
Second version of replacement SSN card. The preprinted information was in blue ink. “Duplicate” was not printed on the card. On the back of the card was “Form OA-702.1.” Date of issue was omitted. All printed information was in black ink. Back of card had: Federal Security Agency, Social Security Board

1940
 Fourth version of SSN card. The preprinted “date of issue” was eliminated. “Employee's signature” changed to “worker's signature.” The stub had the SSN preprinted in red. “Federal Security Agency” was printed on the back of the stub. Instructions said to show card to employer.

Third version of replacement SSN card. The card was the same as the prior version. The stub had a box designated “worker's name and home address.”

1942
 Fourth version of replacement SSN card (12/42 revision). The revision date was printed on the back of the card. The legend “employer's name” was pre-printed on the stub. Preprinted information on the card and stub was in blue ink. Instructions (in black ink) included information about name changes.

1943
 Fifth version of SSN card (4/43 revision). The card looked the same as the prior version. Instructions on the back of the card were expanded.

1944
 Sixth version of SSN card (7/44 revision). The same as the prior version, except the left edge was straight and the form number (“Form OA-702”) and the revision date (7-44) appeared in the lower left corner of the stub and the back of the card.

Fifth version of replacement SSN card (7/44 revision). The card was the same as the prior version. “Employer's name” was no longer preprinted on stub.

1946
 Seventh version of SSN card (1/46 revision). The seal was now the Social Security Administration Seal and both the card and the stub bore the legend “For Social Security Purposes Not For Identification.” Back of the card showed: Federal Security Agency, Social Security Administration.

Sixth version of replacement SSN card (1/46 revision). Both card and stub showed “For Social Security Purposes--Not For Identification” across the bottom. Back of card showed: Federal Security Agency, Social Security Administration.

1948
 Eighth version of SSN card (6/48 revision). Some cards were the same as the prior version; others had a new header, “Social Security” with a small SSA seal in the header between “Social” and “Security.” There were variations in the printings of this version.

Seventh version of replacement SSN card (3/48 revision). Card had the Social Security Administration seal instead of the Social Security Board seal. Back of card showed: Federal Security Agency, Social Security Administration.
Eighth version of replacement SSN card (10/48 revision). The SSA seal appeared as a slightly stippled design in the same shade of blue as the rest of the format. Instructions on the back of the card and the stub were printed in blue ink.

1949
 Ninth version of replacement SSN card (7/49 revision). The card was the same as the prior versions with the “Social Security” header.

1949 – 1951
 Printings of the 6/48 version of the SSN card had a header “Social Security” with a small SSA seal between the two words.

1952
 Ninth version of SSN card (1/52 revision). “Signature” instead of “Worker's signature” appeared on card and stub.

Tenth version of replacement SSN card (1/52 revision). “Signature” rather than “Worker's signature” appeared on card and stub.

1953
 Tenth version of SSN card (4/53 revision). The card was the same as the prior version. The instructions on the back of the card were revised. Also showed: Department of Heath, Education, and Welfare, Social Security Administration.

Eleventh version of replacement SSN card (4/53 revision). The card was the same as the prior version. Instructions on back of card were changed. Back showed: Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Social Security Administration.

1954
 Eleventh version of SSN card (2/54 version). The seal on the card was changed to a small DHEW seal.

Twelfth version of replacement SSN card (2/54 revision). The seal was changed to a DHEW seal.
Twelfth version of SSN card (7/54 revision). The card was the same as the prior version. There were small changes in the instructions on the back of the card.
Thirteenth version of replacement SSN card (7/54 revision). Card and stub were the same as the prior version. Instructions on the back of the card and stub used the term “field office” rather than “district office.”

1956
 Fourteenth version of replacement SSN card (3/56 revision). The card and stub were the same as the prior version. Instructions included information for the NH to get in touch with SSA if totally disabled.

Thirteenth version of SSN card (4/56 revision). The card was the same as the prior version. Instructions on the back of the card said to get in touch with SSA if a worker became totally disabled.
Fifteenth version of replacement SSN card (4/56 revision). The card and stub were the same as the prior version. Some cards may have been printed with 4/56 revision date (rather than 3/56).

1958
 Sixteenth version of replacement SSN card (10/58 revision). The card and stub were the same as the prior version. Instructions included information that a woman should contact SSA when she reached age 62.

1959
 Fourteenth version of SSN card (5/59 revision). The card and the stub were the same as the prior version. Instructions added information that a woman should contact SSA when she reached age 62. The instructions on the back were in black ink.

1961
 Fifteenth version of SSN card (9/61 revision). The card and stub revised to read “For Social Security and Tax Purposes -- Not For Identification.”

Seventeenth version of replacement SSN card (11/61 version). The card and stub revised to read “For Social Security and Tax Purposes -- Not For Identification.”

1970
 Seventeenth version of SSN card

1972
 Eighteenth version of SSN card (1/72 revision). Legend “Not For Identification” was no longer on card (shown from 1946 to 1972). A large DHEW seal was in the middle of the card. The format of the stub was changed to envelope size (the card was a small two-sided tear-off of the stub). The instructions were expanded on the back of the card and stub and were in black ink.

1974
 Eighteen version of replacement SSN card. This was the last version of the replacement SSN card. Thereafter, original and replacement cards looked the same.

1976
 Nineteenth version of SSN card (4/76 revision). The card is the same as the prior version. The stub size is smaller. The instructions are less and are printed in blue ink.

1980
 Twentieth version of the SSN card (5/80 revision). The seal is changed to a DHHS seal.

1981
 Twenty-first version of the SSN card (4/81 revision). The card is the same as the prior version.

1982
 On May 17, 1982, SSA began annotating SSN cards issued to aliens assigned nonwork SSNs “NOT VALID FOR EMPLOYMENT.”

Twenty-second version of SSN card (6/82 revision). The card is the same as the prior version. The SSN was removed from the card stub. Instructions add information about legend on non-work SSN cards.
Twenty-third version of SSN card (9/82 version). The card is the same as the prior version.

1983
 Twenty-fourth version of SSN card (10/83 revision). SSA begins issuing counterfeit resistant SSN card (on blue banknote paper with randomly placed colored planchettes on the back).

1984
 Twenty-fifth version of SSN card (4/84 revision). The card is the same as the prior version with the instructions reformatted.

1987
 Twenty-sixth version of SSN card (1/87 revision). Same as prior version with slightly darker shade of blue ink on back of card and stub.

1988
 Twenty-seventh version of SSN card (1/88 revision). Anti-copy VOID pattern added as security feature for card.

1992
 On September 14, 1992, SSA began showing the legend “VALID FOR WORK ONLY WITH INS AUTHORIZATION” for aliens with temporary work authorization.

1994
 Twenty-eighth version of SSN card (January 1994). Language on the card tells NHs to “Keep card in a safe place to prevent loss or theft.”

1995
 Twenty-ninth version of SSN card (April 1995), has SSA's new seal on the card.

1999
 Thirtieth version of the SSN card (06/99). Corrected SSA address to which cards should be returned.

2002
 Thirty-first version of the SSN card (12/2002). Instructions updated for clarity, to ask that the NH report changes in name, U.S. citizenship or alien status to SSA and not allow others to use SSN. The instruction “do not carry it with you” added to the back of the card.

2004
 Thirty-second version of the SSN card (03/2004). The language, “DO NOT CARRY IT WITH YOU” is added to the face of the card and the anti-copy VOID pattern is removed. In April 2004 the restrictive legend, VALID FOR WORK WITH INS AUTHORIZATION is changed to show INS change to DHS.

2006- 2007
 Thirty-third version of the SSN card (11-2006). Left side of SSN card carrier includes an explanation of the date printed under signature line on SSN card. Right side of carrier provides instructions for signing card. Beginning 04/07, the date the card is issued is printed under the signature line. Beginning 9/08/07, the number holder’s name will always be printed on two lines, with the last name printed directly below the first and middle names.

2007
 Thirty-fourth version of the SSN card (10-2007). The 10-2007 version of the SSN card includes additional security features. Some of the more recognizable features are:

•A unique non-repeating spiral design, replacing the existing marbleized pattern. The new pattern will be the same or a very similar color to the current background and will continue to be erasable.
•Color shifting inks added to the face of the card; very recognizable since it is used in currency.
•A latent image on the face of the card, visible only when the document is viewed at specific angles.

 

Social Security Frequently Asked Questions

Social Security Frequently Asked Questions 
 
Q1:  When did Social Security start?
A: The Social Security Act was signed by FDR on 8/14/35. Taxes were collected for the first time in January 1937 and the first one-time, lump-sum payments were made that same month. Regular ongoing monthly benefits started in January 1940.


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Q2:  What is the origin of the term "Social Security?"
A: The term was first used in the U.S. by Abraham Epstein in connection with his group, the American Association for Social Security. Originally, the Social Security Act of 1935 was named the Economic Security Act, but this title was changed during Congressional consideration of the bill. (The full story has been recounted by Professor Edwin Witte who was present at the event.)


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Q3:  When did Medicare start?
A:  Medicare was passed into law on July 30, 1965 but beneficiaries were first able to sign-up for the program on July 1, 1966.


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Q4:  Is it true that Social Security was originally just a retirement program?
A:  Yes. Under the 1935 law, what we now think of as Social Security only paid retirement benefits to the primary worker. A 1939 change in the law added survivors benefits and benefits for the retiree's spouse and children. In 1956 disability benefits were added.
Keep in mind, however, that the Social Security Act itself was much broader than just the program which today we commonly describe as "Social Security." The original 1935 law contained the first national unemployment compensation program, aid to the states for various health and welfare programs, and the Aid to Dependent Children program. (Full text of the 1935 law.)


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Q5:  Is it true that members of Congress do not have to pay into Social Security?
A:  No, it is not true. All members of Congress, the President and Vice President, Federal judges, and most political appointees, were covered under the Social Security program starting in January 1984. They pay into the system just like everyone else. Thus all members of Congress, no matter how long they have been in office, have been paying into the Social Security system since January 1984.
(Prior to this time, most Federal government workers and officials were participants in the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) which came into being in 1920--15 years before the Social Security system was formed. For this reason, historically, Federal employees were not participants in the Social Security system.)
Employees of the three branches of the federal government, were also covered starting in January 1984, under the 1983 law--but with some special transition rules.
1) Executive and judicial branch employees hired before January 1, 1984 were given a one-time irrevocable choice of whether to switch to Social Security or stay under the old CSRS. (Rehired employees--other than rehired annuitants--are treated like new employees if their break-in-service was more than a year.)
2) Employees of the legislative branch who were not participating in the CSRS system were mandatorily covered, regardless of when their service began. Those who were in the CSRS system were given the same one-time choice as employees in the executive and judicial branches.
3) All federal employees hired on or after January 1, 1984 are mandatorily covered under Social Security--the CSRS system is not an option for them.
So there are still some Federal employees, those first hired prior to January 1984, who are not participants in the Social Security system. All other Federal government employees participate in Social Security like everyone else.
This change was part of the 1983 Amendments to Social Security. You can find a summary of the 1983 amendments elsewhere on this site.


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Q6:  Is is true that the age of 65 was chosen as the retirement age for Social Security because the Germans used 65 in their system, and the Germans used age 65 because their Chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, was 65 at the time they developed their system?
A:  No, it is not true. Generally, age 65 was chosen to conform to contemporary practice during the 1930s. (See more detailed explanation.)


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Q7:  Is it true that life expectancy was less than 65 back in 1935, so the Social Security program was designed in such a way that people would not live long enough to collect benefits?
A:  Not really. Life expectancy at birth was less than 65, but this is a misleading measure. A more appropriate measure is life expectancy after attainment of adulthood, which shows that most Americans could expect to live to age 65 once they survived childhood. (See more detailed explanation.)


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Q8:  When did COLAs (cost-of-living allowances) start?
A:  COLAs were first paid in 1975 as a result of a 1972 law. Prior to this, benefits were increased irregularly by special acts of Congress.
(See historical table of COLA amounts.)
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Q9:  What information is available from Social Security records to help in genealogical research?
A:  You might want to start by checking out the Social Security Death Index which is available online from a variety of commercial services (usually the search is free). The Death Index contains a listing of persons who had a Social Security number, who are deceased, and whose death was reported to the Social Security Administration. (The information in the Death Index for people who died prior to 1962 is sketchy since SSA's death information was not automated before that date. Death information for persons who died before 1962 is generally only in the Death Index if the death was actually reported to SSA after 1962, even though the death occurred prior to that year.)
If you find a person in the Death Index you will learn the date of birth and Social Security Number for that person. (The Social Security Death Index is not published by SSA for public use, but is made available by commercial entities using information from SSA records. We do not offer support of these commercial products nor can we answer questions about the material in the Death Index.)
Other records potentially available from SSA include the Application for a Social Security Number (form SS-5). To obtain any information from SSA you will need to file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request.


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Q10:  Does Social Security have any lists of the most common names in use in the U.S.?
A:  Yes, based on the applications for Social Security cards, SSA's Office of the Actuary has done a series of special studies of the most common names.


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Q11:  Where do I get more information about the Social Security program as it exists today?
A: Go to our Social Security Online home page.


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Q12:  Who was the first person to get Social Security benefits?
A: A fellow named Ernest Ackerman got a payment for 17 cents in January 1937. This was a one-time, lump-sum pay-out--which was the only form of benefits paid during the start-up period January 1937 through December 1939.


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Q13:  If Ernest Ackerman only received a single lump-sum payment, who was the first person to received ongoing monthly benefits?
A: A woman named Ida May Fuller , from Ludlow, Vermont was the first recipient of monthly Social Security benefits.


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Q14:  How many people, annually, have received Social Security payments?
A: This history is available as a detailed table. (Payment history table)
There is also a (PDF-format) table which shows the minimum and maximum Retirement Benefit amounts over the years.


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Q15:  What is the "notch"?
A: In 1972 a technical error was introduced in the law which resulted in beneficiaries getting a double adjustment for inflation. In 1977 Congress acted to correct the error. Instead of making the correction immediate, they phased it in over a five year period (this is the notch period). This phase-in period was defined as affecting those people born in 1917-1921. Individuals in the notch generally receive higher benefits than those born after the notch, although they receive lower benefits than those born in the period prior to the notch when the error was in effect.
See SSA Factsheet on the notch
See detailed Congressional study of the issue


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Q16:  Where can I find the history of the tax rates over the years and the amount of earnings subject to Social Security taxes?
A:  The history of the tax rates is available as an Adobe PDF file. (Tax rate table). There is also a table showing the maximum amount of Social Security taxes that could have been paid since the program began.
There are also tables showing the minimum and maximum Social Security benefit for a retired worker who retires at age 62 and one who retires at age 65.
Also, there is a table showing the number of workers paying into Social Security each year. (Covered workers table) And also a table showing the ratio of covered workers to beneficiaries. (Ratio table)


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Q17:  What does FICA mean and why are Social Security taxes called FICA contributions?
A:  Social Security payroll taxes are collected under authority of the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA). The payroll taxes are sometimes even called "FICA taxes." In the original 1935 law the benefit provisions were in Title II of the Act and the taxing provisions were in a separate title, Title VIII. As part of the 1939 Amendments, the Title VIII taxing provisions were taken out of the Social Security Act and placed in the Internal Revenue Code. Since it wouldn't make any sense to call this new section of the Internal Revenue Code "Title VIII," it was renamed the "Federal Insurance Contributions Act." So FICA is nothing more than the tax provisions of the Social Security Act, as they appear in the Internal Revenue Code.


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Q18:  Is there any significance to the numbers assigned in the Social Security Number?
A: Yes. The first three digits are assigned by the geographical region in which the person was residing at the time he/she obtained a number. Generally, numbers were assigned beginning in the northeast and moving westward. So people on the east coast have the lowest numbers and those on the west coast have the highest numbers. The remaining six digits in the number are more or less randomly assigned and were organized to facilitate the early manual bookkeeping operations associated with the creation of Social Security in the 1930s.


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Q19:  How many Social Security numbers have been issued since the program started?
A:  Social Security numbers were first issued in November 1936. To date, 453.7 million different numbers have been issued.


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Q20:  Are Social Security numbers reused after a person dies?
A:  No. We do not reassign a Social Security number (SSN) after the number holder's death. Even though we have issued over 453 million SSNs so far, and we assign about 5 and one-half million new numbers a year, the current numbering system will provide us with enough new numbers for several generations into the future with no changes in the numbering system.


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Q21:  When did Social Security cards bear the legend "NOT FOR IDENTIFICATION"?
A:  The first Social Security cards were issued starting in 1936, they did not have this legend. Beginning with the sixth design version of the card, issued starting in 1946, SSA added a legend to the bottom of the card reading "FOR SOCIAL SECURITY PURPOSES -- NOT FOR IDENTIFICATION." This legend was removed as part of the design changes for the 18th version of the card, issued beginning in 1972. The legend has not been on any new cards issued since 1972.


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Q22:  Does the Social Security Number contain a code indicating the racial group to which the cardholder belongs?
A:  No. This is a myth. The Social Security Number does contain a segment (the two middle numbers) known as "the group number." But this refers only to the numerical groups 01-99. It has nothing to do with race. (See more detailed explanation.)Financing


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Q23:  Has Social Security ever been financed by general tax revenues?
A:  Not to any significant extent. (See detailed explanation.)


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Q24:  How much has Social Security paid out since it started?
A:  From 1937 (when the first payments were made) through 2009 the Social Security program has expended $11.3 trillion.
(See detailed tables of annual Social Security payments 1937-2008.) (See also detail for Q26)


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Q25:  How much has Social Security taken in taxes and other income since it started?
A:  From 1937 (when taxes were first collected) through 2009 the Social Security program has received $13.8 trillion in income.
(See detailed tables of annual Social Security revenues 1937-2008.) (See also detail for Q26)


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Q26:  Has Social Security always taken in more money each year than it needed to pay benefits?
A:  No. So far there have been 11 years in which the Social Security program did not take enough in FICA taxes to pay the current year's benefits. During these years, Trust Fund bonds in the amount of about $24 billion made up the difference. (See detailed Table.)


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Q27:  Do the Social Security Trust Funds earn interest?
A:  Yes they do. By law, the assets of the Social Security program must be invested in securities guaranteed as to both principal and interest. The Trust Funds hold a mix of short-term and long-term government bonds. The Trust Funds can hold both regular Treasury securities and "special obligation" securities issued only to federal trust funds. In practice, most of the securities in the Social Security Trust Funds are of the "special obligation" type. (See additional explanation from SSA's Office of the Actuary.)
The Trust Funds earn interest which is set at the average market yield on long-term Treasury securities. Interest earnings on the invested assets of the combined OASI and DI Trust Funds were $55.5 billion in calendar year 1999. This represented an effective annual interest rate of 6.9 percent.
The Trust Funds have earned interest in every year since the program began. More detailed information on the Trust Fund investments can be found in the Annual Report of the Social Security Trustees and on the Actuary's webpages concerning the Investment Transactions and Investment Holdings of the Trust Funds.


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Q28:  Did President Franklin Roosevelt make a set of promises about Social Security, which have now been violated?
A:  This question generally refers to a set of misinformation that is propagated over the Internet (usually via email) from time to time. (See a detailed explanation here.)


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Q29:  I have seen a set of questions and answers on the Internet concerning who started the taxing of Social Security benefits, and questions like that. Are the answers given correct?
A:  There are many varieties of questions and answers of this form circulating on the Internet. One fairly widespread form of the questions is filled with misinformation. (See a detailed explanation here.) We recommend that Internet users refer to SSA's official Questions and Answers section on our homepage for reliable information (go to http://www.socialsecurity.gov/ for the Q & A section.)

Social Security

Social Security

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Social Security is a compulsory social insurance program primarily for old people and the disabled, sponsored by the U.S. federal government. It is strongly endorsed by all major conservative politicians in recent decades, and was expanded by presidents George W. Bush and Dwight D. Eisenhower, and put on a stable financial basis by Ronald Reagan. Social Security includes Medicare, starting in 1965, which covers medical costs of beneficiaries.
Social Security is part of the welfare state, but it is not considered a welfare program because the beneficiaries have paid into it all their working lives.
Social security programs were first introduced by conservatives and pro-business politicians, such as Otto von Bismark in Germany and Winston Churchill in Britain, in order to weaken Socialism. All developed countries have a system somewhat similar to the U.S.

Contents

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History

In 1889 Germany was the first country to introduce government pension plans. Britain introduced its program in 1907.

United States

Social Security was founded as a quick-fix solution to unemployment by paying off older workers to give up their jobs for younger workers. No net new jobs were created. Economists call this a zero-sum game, where net gains and losses are exactly balanced. The payment system mimicks the idea of insurance premiums with payments withheld from a workers paycheck. None of the premiums, however, have ever been invested in a so-called "Trust fund," and are actually diverted into a "pay as you go" (or "paygo") system destined for immediate aggregate consumption expenditures. Hence many of the structural flaws date from the programs' origins.
Payments are based on a percentage of earnings of workers which become an obligation, or debt, of the United States government. The current rates are 15.3% -- half provided by the worker and half paid by the employer, which includes Medicare. No deduction or personal exemption is allowed, meaning the very first dollar of earnings is taxed.
Over the years excess withholdings from workers paychecks, (known as F.I.C.A.), have been used to fund government paygo operations such as the Vietnam War,[1][2][3] for instance. However, overwithholding from workers paychecks will become less of a problem in the near future as the gap is closed between the ratio of workers supporting the system, and those drawing upon the system for sustenance.
With the abject failure of the First New Deal to create any net new private sector jobs, the Social Security Act was passed in 1935 and started operations in 1937. Since benefits required at least 5 years of payments, a special program was included in 1937 to help old people who already were retired and who had high rates of poverty. The program was never intended to be the sole means of support for retirees; in a 1939 message to Congress President Roosevelt said,
We shall make the most orderly progress if we look upon Social Security as a development toward a goal rather than a finished product. We shall make the most lasting progress if we recognize that Social Security can furnish only a base upon which each one of our citizens may build his individual security through his own individual efforts.”[4]

President Franklin Roosevelt's proposal for an overwithholding slush fund

The Social Security Act was drafted by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's committee on economic security, under Edwin E. Witte, and passed during FDR's first term which provided for workers who reach the age of 65 a pension of $8 a week at most. The plan had to be pushed through against FDR's procrastination until finally in the 1934 congressional elections the Republicans denounced him for his tardiness. When FDR finally consented to a bill, it contained a plan for building a huge reserve fund that would extract billions from the workers' payrolls without any adequate return. Over the protest of the President, the Congress finally took that provision proposed by Roosevelt out of the law. [5]

President Lyndon Johnson raids the Social Security Trust Fund to wage the Vietnam War

President Johnson created the 'unified budget' in the late 1960s to disguise the real cost of the Vietnam War.[6] [7] President Johnson did not want to ask for income tax increases to pay for several ambitious government programs of that era (the Vietnam War, the Great Society War on Poverty, the NASA Space Race). Putting surpluses from Social Security overwithholding “on budget” (adding them to the general operating budget of the United States Government) so the overwithholding could be used to pay for other government programs would make the federal budget appear balanced. The resulting debt to Trust Funds would be presented “off budget.”
In 1967 President Johnson appointed a Commission on Federal Budget Concepts which in its October 1967 report proposed a unified budget to do this. Johnson submitted the first unified budget to a Democratic Congress for Fiscal Year 1969 scheduled to begin on July 1, 1968. Thus was born the practice of using Social Security Trust Fund surpluses – or "Intra-governmental Holdings of Debt" to hide the size of the overall federal deficit.

President Bill Clinton's proposal to Privatize Social Security

Social Security has been called the "third rail of American politics" because politicians get badly burned if they try to tamper with it. In 1999 President Clinton proposed investing the Social Security Trust Fund in what some might consider "risky" assets in the stock market and bonds. The stock market then was in the late stages of a bull market cycle with stock prices and indexes overvalued. Clinton told a joint meeting fo the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate,
I propose that we commit 60 percent of the budget surplus for the next 15 years to Social Security, investing a small portion in the private sector, just as any private or State Government pension would do.[8]

The Clinton/Gore Tax on Social Security benefits

In 1993 President Clinton sought to increase taxes on Social Security benefits of the elderly and disabled.[9] The final version of the bill passed by the Democratically controlled Congress increased taxes on beneficiaries from the first 50% to 85%[10] of benefits (or "annuity payments" as they were originally called). Vice President Al Gore cast the deciding tie-breaker vote in the Senate to make the tax increase law. The Clinton-Gore tax increase on Social Security benefits imposed a 70% income tax rate on a retired couple making as little as $22,000 per year.[11]
In 2009 conservatives attacked the Democrats health care reform program because it reneged on promises made to Medicare beneficiaries.

Social Security and African-Americans

When Social Security was first passed most blacks worked on farms or as domestics and were not covered. Nearly all have left the farms--and the the few remaining domestics are now covered.
The amount of social security benefits received depends on how long one lives after retiring. African-Americans generally have lower life expectancies than other groups. When a black man reaches age 65, he is expected to live only another 13.9 years, almost 2 years (24 payments) less than a white male. The RAND Corporation concluded that, because of differences in life expectancies and marriage rates, on a life-time basis the income transfer from blacks to whites is as much as $10,000 per person. However, blacks aree more likely to receive disability benefits.
African-Americans are much more likely than other groups to be largely dependent on Social Security for retirement income.

The payroll tax

Source of payment Amount of contributions
Social Security contributions by employer 6.2%
Medicare contributions by employer 1.45%
Social Security contribution by worker 6.2%
Medicare contribution by worker 1.45%
Total contributions based on workers Gross earnings 15.3%
Plus other mandated payments of employer varies
Unemployment insurance paid by employer varies by State
Workers Compensation insurance paid by employer varies by occupation and State
Plus other benefits varies
Medical benefits paid by worker and employer varies
Private retirement plans paid by worker and employer varies
There are four component parts that constitute payments to a workers public sector retirement fund, of which the payroll tax paid by workers furnishes only half. Employers are required to pay the other half based on a percentage of the workers gross wages (W-2 income). The employer's share of mandated payments, on behalf of the worker, is not seen in the worker's gross wages, yet the cost is very real. Other factors also weigh on employers ability to give raises, extend overtime, or create new jobs.
Rep. Paul Ryan, Chairman of the House Budget Committee in the 112th Congress, proposed in his Roadmap for America's Future a choice for all workers to be allowed to invest 2 percent of their first $10,000 of annual payroll tax into personal accounts. Workers would be allowed to select from a list of managed investment funds, approved by the government for soundness and safety, like those in the federal government’s Thrift Savings Plan.
Harold Meyerson of the Democratic Socialists of America, writing in the Washington Post proposed eliminating the payroll tax altogether, for both employers and employees, claiming it would increase by $2,100 the take-home pay, and buying power, of workers making $50,000 annually.[12]

Medicare

In 1965, prodded by liberal president Lyndon Johnson, Congress enacted the Medicare program as part of the "Great Society." Medicare revenues operates as part of the Social Security program and reimburses some health care providers for beneficiaries over the age of 65. A Medicaid program was established to provide health care for poor people who can not afford private health insurance.

Present liabilities promised to Baby boomers

Graph: USA Today
The cost of Social Security benefits that were promised to 70 million Americans of the "baby-boom" generation exceeds $53 trillion dollars ($53,000,000,000,000).[13][14][15] To understand the magnitude of this figure by contrast, the World Bank estimates the GDP of the planet (total economic output) for the year 2008 as $61.063 trillion.[16] The sum total of promises made to all working age adults in the U.S population is estimated at over $106 trillion,[17][18] more than one and half times the total annualized economic activity of the planet. An editorial in USA Today claims "Without action, outlays on benefit programs such as Medicare and Social Security, combined with interest on the national debt, are projected to grow so fast that they will devour all tax revenue in as soon as 20 years. That means every government department and agency, except for those that pay benefits and service the debt, could be eliminated — and Washington would still run a deficit."[19]

Reform

Is Social Security experiencing a cash flow crisis?[20] Actuaries say that thanks to the Reagan reforms of 1983, Social Security is fully funded for 75 years. Medicare is much harder to gauge, because no one knows the future rate of growth of medical costs, which have been quite high in recent decades.

In 2005 President Bush proposed a privatization program that would allow people to control their own Social Security accounts, especially by investments in the stock market. He argued that the stock market provided higher rates of return. The proposals got little support and were dropped. The stock market collapse in the Recession of 2008 chilled enthusiasm for similar proposals, and no prominent politician in 2009 is proposing privatization.

Pros and cons of social security

This is a list of the most common arguments used in favour of, and against social security, some may not apply to American social security, since it is not as extensive as that of other developed nations.

Pros

Safety Net
  • Health benefits for everyone over 65.
  • Cash benefit for the elderly who haven't provided for private retirement plans.
Security
  • Social security decreases extreme poverty, which in turn decreases crime [21].

Cons

  • Individual Empowerment: individuals would have more motivation to work hard and succeed, this may not however apply to some disabled persons and the economy is unpredictable (recessions).
  • Higher Returns and Greater Benefits: even the most conservative investors would accrue substantial assets during their lifetimes through privately invested accounts, which historically have yielded far more than Social Security promises in retirement income.
  • Improved Economy: economists believe that the overall economy will benefit from an increase in savings and investment resulting from this system. Retirement savings provided by workers create jobs, unlike the Social Security pay as you go system destined for immediate aggregate personal consumption expenditures.
  • Some individuals will get "lazy" and choose not to work, only costing society.
  • Economic costs of the program. It is estimated that Social Security will be broke in the early-to-mid 21st century.

France

In September 2010 an estimated one to three million demonstrators took to the streets to protest a government effort to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62.[22]

Greece

In February 2010 Greece announced austerity plans to overhaul its Social Security system in the wake of the Greek Sovereign Debt Crisis.[23]

Spain

Spain has the highest worker-pensioner ratio in the world. Four workers currently contribute 21.3% of thier income to support one Social Security recipient.[24][25] These numbers are particularly alarming given Spanish Unemployment has risen to a record high of 20%[26] after the global Financial Crisis of 2008.
By 2050 the worker-pensioner ratio in Spain is projected to shrink to 1.4 workers for every recipient.[27]

Criticism

Social security has been called a "Ponzi Scheme" that "shifts wealth from private individuals to government."[28] The Social Security tax (aka the payroll tax or the FICA tax - Federal Insurance Contribution Act) has been called a regressive tax by the political left because the effective tax rate decreases as income increases (because there is a taxable maximum).[29] Social Security has also been widely (and wrongly) criticized for contributing to the United States's National Debt even though the Social Security Trust Fund is separate from the Treasury's general funds and the Social Security Trust Fund has actually financed a large portion of the national debt. [30].

The future of Social Security

Each one dollar withheld from workers earnings as FICA tax is one dollar added to the National debt; due to this structural flaw by the founders of Social Security, the U.S. Public Debt can not be paid down by labor.[31]
Social security will face many problems in the 21st century, most notably the aging of the population in developed nations, although more problematic in Europe and especially Japan, will strain American social security budgets [32] In calendar year 2010, Social Security's outlays will exceed tax revenues (that is, the trust funds' receipts excluding interest) for the first time since the enactment of the Social Security Amendments of 1983.[33] According to the Congressional Budget Office, Social Security will exhaust its current sources of revenue completely by 2042 and will be "unable to pay full benefits without changes in law."[34]

Further reading

  • Beland, Daniel. Social Security: History and Politics from the New Deal to the Privatization Debate (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Glenn, Brian J. and Steven M. Teles, eds. Conservatism and American Political Development (2009), two chapters on conservatives andSocial Security issues since 1930s excerpt and text search
  • Shoven, John B. and George P. Shultz. Putting Our House in Order: A Guide to Social Security and Health Care Reform (2008), a conservative analysis excerpt and text search

References

  1. "President Johnson issued a 'unified' federal budget for FY1969. This was done administratively (i.e., not as a result of legislation)." Social Security and the Federal Budget: What Does Social Security’s Being “Off Budget” Mean? Congresasional Research Service, 98-422 EPW, Updated July 23, 1998, p. 20.
  2. The Federal Budget and Stabilization Policy in 1968.
  3. Trust Funds in the Unified Budget, p.3.
  4. A Message Transmitting to Congress a Report of the Social Security Board recommending certain improvements in the Law. January 16, 1939. Retrieved from the Historian’s Office of the Social Security Administration, January 5, 2011.
  5. The Roosevelt Myth, John T. Flynn, Fox and Wilkes, 1948, pp. 67-68, 424-425 pdf.
  6. Federal Fiscal Policy 1965-72, Federal Reserve Bulletin, No. 6 Vol. 59, July 1973.
  7. Sunder, S., Econometrics of fair values, Accounting Horizons 22(1): 111-125.
  8. President Bill Clinotn's 1999 State of the Union Address, January 19, 1999. Retrieved from C-Span.org 19 August 2010.
  9. http://www.house.gov/house/Contract/seniorsd.txt
  10. http://web.archive.org/web/20040408115747/www.ssa.gov/OACT/HOP/hopi.htm
  11. Congressional Record, Comments by Rep. Christopher Cox, July 27, 2000.
  12. http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/time-for-another-stimulus-mr-president/2011/08/09/gIQAjwLQ5I_story.html
  13. http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2004-10-03-debt-cover_x.htm
  14. http://www.usatoday.com/news/graphics/debtcalculator/flash.htm
  15. http://fiscalsolvency.com/the_3_parts_of_our_fiscal_crisis.htm
  16. http://www.google.com/publicdata?ds=wb-wdi&met=ny_gdp_mktp_cd&idim=country:USA&dl=en&hl=en&q=gdp#met=ny_gdp_mktp_cd&tdim=true See also CIA World Fact Book [1]
  17. http://www.cnbc.com/id/38979552
  18. http://www.forbes.com/2009/05/14/taxes-social-security-opinions-columnists-medicare.html
  19. Our view on government inaction: Gridlock's just another word for lack of leadership, USA Today editorial, November 11, 2010.
  20. Social Security Commissioner, 2006 Social Security Statement

  21. Poverty, Income Inequality, and Violent Crime: A Meta-Analysis of Recent Aggregate Data Studies Ching-Chi Hsieh [2]

  22. http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100923/ts_afp/francestrikepensionpolitics

  23. http://news.ebru.tv/en/Europe/14657.html

  24. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPENSIONS/Resources/395443-1142535808399/2329423-1170369479400/Pensions_in_Aging_Societies_Galasso.pdf

  25. http://spanishinsight.blogspot.com/2010/10/when-will-spanish-pensions-system.html

  26. http://www.google.com/publicdata?ds=z9a8a3sje0h8ii_&met=unemployment_rate&idim=eu_country:ES&dl=en&hl=en&q=spanish+unemployment

  27. http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/worldageing19502050/

  28. http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/03/the_politics_of_social_securit.html

  29. "Contribution and Benefit Base." Social Security Online. [3]

  30. "The Truth About Who Really Owns All of America's Debt." Business Insider. http://www.businessinsider.com/who-owns-us-debt-2011-7#social-security-trust-fund-17

  31. http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/resources/faq/faq_publicdebt.htm#DebtOwner

  32. Will social security and Medicare remain viable as the US population is aging? (pdf) Henning Bohn[4]

  33. Congressional Budget Office, Long-Term Projections for Social Security, October 2010.