Rich Fiesta, Executive Director of the Alliance for Retired Americans, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to deliver a warning about the Social Security trust fund's trajectory. If Congress does nothing, beneficiaries will face an average benefit cut of approximately 22 percent — or about $500 per month — beginning in 2032.
Fiesta traced the roots of the shortfall to wage stagnation that began in the Reagan era and explained why the 1983 reforms arrived roughly 15 years ahead of schedule in paying out more than projected. He also laid out the legislative solutions that exist right now, but require a worker-friendly Congress to pass. On a related note, he discussed the bipartisan polling reality that raising the retirement age above 67 is the single most universally opposed policy among Americans, regardless of party, income or geography.
More than 70 million Americans currently receive Social Security benefits. And for the past two decades, Rich Fiesta, executive director of the Alliance for Retired Americans, has been raising the alarm about what happens to those benefits in less than six years. The math is not complicated, but the politics are.
If Congress does nothing before 2032, the Social Security trust fund will reach a point at which monthly revenues are no longer sufficient to cover full monthly benefit payments. The fund does not go to zero. It simply cannot cover 100 percent of what is owed. The result is an automatic average benefit cut of approximately 22 percent — about $500 per month for the average beneficiary. By 2032, the number of Americans receiving Social Security will be close to 80 million. The economic consequence of cutting $500 per month from 80 million household budgets is significant. Social Security benefits go directly into local economies — urban, rural, suburban — the moment they arrive. Fiesta described it as one of the most powerful economic engines in the country, and a 22 percent reduction would be felt across the country.
The 1983 Social Security reforms, enacted during the Reagan administration, were designed to sustain the trust fund for approximately 75 years. The architects of that plan got the demographic projections right — birth rates, immigration and aging population. They got the math right on virtually everything except the assumption that wages would rise with productivity, as they had in the decades following World War II.
That assumption did not hold. Trickle-down economic policies that began in the Reagan era produced four decades of wage stagnation relative to productivity growth. Workers were not earning as the actuaries had projected. The payroll tax base grew more slowly than expected. And the trust fund is now arriving at a shortfall approximately 15 years ahead of the 75-year projection. Fiesta emphasized that Social Security's design is not flawed. It is the consequence of economic policies that choose to let productivity gains accumulate at the top rather than flow through wages.
The Social Security actuaries — who Fiesta noted remain neutral and have not been touched by the current administration — publish their projections annually, and the numbers are clear. The problem is defined. The solutions are defined. What is missing is the political will to enact the needed changes.
The most straightforward fix is to scrap or raise the earnings cap. Social Security payroll taxes currently apply only to the first $184,000 of annual earnings. Income above that threshold does not contribute to the trust fund. Sen. Bernie Sanders and Sen. Brian Schatz have introduced legislation to either eliminate the cap or reinstate it for earnings above $250,000 or $400,000 per year. Congressman John Larson has carried parallel legislation in the House. Either approach would both strengthen the trust fund and allow for benefit increases.
What the legislation cannot do right now is pass. The current Republican-controlled Congress includes members actively proposing to raise the retirement age to 69 or 70, which Fiesta noted would make the United States an outlier among all major economic competitors globally. Alliance for Retired Americans polling consistently finds that raising the retirement age above 67 is the single policy position that unites Americans across every demographic, political affiliation, income level and geography in opposition. It does not matter what else divides them. On this, they agree.
Fiesta's prescription for the immediate term is to win back the House, which he said has better than a 50 percent chance heading into November. A Senate pickup is also within reach, he said. With a worker-friendly Congress and the legislation already written, the path to fixing Social Security before the 2032 cliff is clear.
In the meantime, the Alliance for Retired Americans maintains a comprehensive voting record database at retiredamericans.org that covers every House and Senate vote on retiree issues dating back to 2001. Ten votes per year are tracked across Social Security, Medicare, prescription drug pricing, voting rights and Social Security Administration funding. Every member of Congress has a record. Fiesta's message to listeners is to look up their representatives before they go to the polls.
He also addressed the language that has surrounded Social Security for decades: the word entitlement. Every dollar in the Social Security trust fund was contributed by workers and their employers through payroll taxes. The fund pays the salaries of the people who administer it. It is not a government handout. It is earned. Fiesta said the message is getting through more and more as the Alliance, labor unions and advocates keep saying it loudly and consistently — including on programs like this one.
More information and the full voting record database are available at retiredamericans.org.
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