Growing U.S. inequality is worsening Social Security’s financial crunch, group says

(Photo: US Government / MGN)

(CBS NEWS) — Social Security’s looming funding crisis is usually blamed on demographics, with an aging U.S. population and declining birth rates leaving fewer workers to support retirees. But another force is also draining the program’s finances: widening income inequality.

In the last few decades, incomes of higher-paid Americans have soared, far outpacing those of low- and middle-class workers. That’s become a problem for Social Security because the program only taxes annual earnings up to $184,500, meaning it loses out on much of the faster income growth among top earners.

As a result, Social Security’s revenue base is eroding, according to the program’s latest trustees’ report. The share of total wages subject to Social Security taxes has fallen from almost 87% in 1984 to roughly 83% today, largely because high earners’ pay has grown much faster than everyone else’s, lifting more of their income above the tax cap, the report found.

“The Social Security trust fund is under strain because Congress has failed to update the program for the economy we actually have,” Elizabeth Wilkins, CEO of the Roosevelt Institute, a progressive think tank, said earlier this month. “Too much income now flows to the top, where it escapes Social Security taxation.”

Eliminating the $184,500 tax cap, one proposal for fixing Social Security, could shore up the program’s finances by requiring high-income Americans to contribute more to support the retirement and disability program, according to some policy experts.

Without an overhaul, Social Security’s trust fund is on track to become insolvent by the end of 2032, the trustees’ report said earlier this month. At that point, the program’s roughly 70 million beneficiaries would see a 22% cut to their monthly Social Security checks, an average reduction of about $500 per month.

That’s an outcome that experts say would lead to widespread financial hardship among seniors, disabled people, and children and spouses of deceased workers. Social Security has faced a financial shortfall before, when in the early 1980s its trust funds were on the brink of insolvency due to economic turbulence over the previous decade.

Categories: News, Top Stories, US, US