I believe this used to be true; people received more in Social Security benefits than they contributed. But ISTR reading that this is no longer the case, and that people will receive less in benefits than they contribute. (Not that I have a problem with that.)
It’s definitely not true if you don’t count employer contributions. If you do, then it comes out nearly equal for most people as seen below.
There are three different “tiers” based on your average monthly income adjusted for inflation. Up to around minimum wage you get a monthly SS check equal to 85% of your average monthly income, which equates to much more than you put in if you live an average lifespan.
The next tier is 35% and it is good up until around 50K a year, but much like income tax, it is marginal so you still get some of your income back at 85%. 35%, by my calculations, is roughly what you put in, so people in this bracket still get back more than they put in on average (tho I may be wrong.)
But then there are the high income earners who, past a certain point, only get reimbursed by SS to the tune of 15% of their monthly income (up to the SS maximum which is over 100K.) For this bracket you get a lot less back than what you put in, but are still getting some of your income back at 85%. By my calculations, and they may be wrong, most people who don’t die too early to collect are getting around as much or more more than they put in unless they earn over 100K.
There’s no way of knowing what future changes to the system will do to contributions and benefits. What people are putting in or getting out 10 or 20 years from now may look very different from what’s happening today.
Inflation adjusted or non-inflation adjusted? In non-inflation adjusted terms I’m certain people get more than they contribute on average, counting employer contributions as contributions on the somewhat laughable assumption that the employee would get them. In inflation adjusted terms I don’t know. If it was done purely statistically I’d say it would be break even, but politics could have been involved.
In addition to what Ludovic posted, other variables are age that payment starts, marital status, whether a spouse contributes, and total length of payments. Any individual, therefore, could possibly see a negative return.
I haven’t done the math on this, but I have a sneaking suspicion that if I had managed to sock away 15.3% of every dollar I’ve earned since I started working in 1968 (which is my SS contribution plus my employers’), I’d have enough of a nest egg to have a much nicer income in retirement than SS is likely to provide, and I wouldn’t have to rely on the whim of the government as to whether it would honor its promise to pay. Also, I could pass the nest egg on to my heirs when I die. Social Security strikes me as something we would have been better off without as a nation. Basically, it’s just another tax that the government can use as it sees fit.
I should probably clarify that when I said, “sock away,” I meant savings through some sort of private investment like stocks, bonds or mutual funds, not hiding it under my mattress.
Yes, that’s likely for you (I’m assuming you have at least a middle class income).
But it completely misses the point of social security, which is a social insurance plan rather than an investment plan. As noted in many, many other threads on the topic, you don’t expect a great ROI on your auto insurance, either.
And no, this is not strictly true, though Congress does borrow from it. The difference is that the money must be paid back and a strict accounting is maintained.
Yes, you might have , just like I’d have been better off socking away my homeowner’s insurance premium if I never make a claim. Social Security is at least as much an insurance plan as it is a retirement plan - and the family with young children that with an income earner who becomes disabled or dies at 30 wouldn’t have been better off socking away that 15.3% . And my non-contributing aunt who collected SS as a spouse for about 30 years after her husband’s death wouldn’t have been better off if he had socked away that 15.3%. In order to pay more than the contributons in those situations , others must get back less than they contributed just like any other insurance.
As much as I’d like to point out flaws in NeonMadman’s argument, I hope we can keep this GQ and not turn it into a debate. Ludovic’s and Exapno Mapcase’s posts were helpful.
I am in the “SS is insurance, not a retirement investment” camp, so I won’t argue that point.
I did take a look at my annual SS Statement that most people should be getting. It shows me the total taxes I paid and the total paid by my employers. (The tax rate ranged from a combined rate of 6% to 12.4% over my working career - not 15.3%.)
I don’t know how typical I am, but I paid into SS for 47 years, stopping at age 60. Of that time, 10 years were part time or military. Of the remaining 37 years, I hit the salary cap for the last 24 years. This means that on an annual basis, I will get back less of my contributions than those who do not hit the cap.
If I had taken SS at normal retirement age of 66, I would start collecting more than I paid in after 8 years and 2 months of benefits - without accounting for COL increases.
Looking at my family, I am likely to live much longer than age 74 - so I will collect much more than paid in taxes individually and by my employers.
FICA taxes don’t start until one is 21. So if you stopped at age 60, how could you have paid in for 47 years? I did the math a long time ago (I’m 76 now) as to whether it would be better to receive early old-age benefits or wait until full retirement age, and came out with the same results: wait if you expect to live to at least 74.
Other factors are involved as to the benefits, as others have pointed out: Auxiliary benefits may be available to spouse, children, even parents in certain cases. In addition, Medicare is not available unless you were fully insured. In my case, I had several operations for which Medicare paid the 80% (and my supplemental insurance the other 20%) after the annual deductions. Of course I’ve had to pay the moly coverage (about $100). For some who need care after hospitalization, either at home or in a skilled nursing facility, that adds up to a lot of money. If you get Medicare B, which most do, this is another moly expense, but that covers durable medical equipment, physicians, etc.
Think of it this way. Social security rises with wages. So mostly speaking people contribute to social security at a lower wage rate than they receive income. Those who live longest benefit most.
So why do people not recognize this? Many ignore the fact that they their FICA deduction contains disability insurance as well. So yeah, if you never lose a limb, etc. you might put in more than you take out. But you need to factor in the protection against physical disaster that social security gives you.
As a savings vehicle, social security has a lot features. Benefits are correlated with personal misfortune and only weakly correlated with the stock market. They are also correlated with longevity. It’s an excellent adjunct to most retirement plans.
Since this is turning into a GD anyway, I may as well throw in my thoughts:
This is its biggest benefit, combined with the subsidization of lower incomes. If you would have been able to put the money in the stock market in the 80s and 90s, you would have blown away SS (and even matched SS even if you were at a low income!)
Other decades, not so much. We as a society have decided that we do not want anyone to starve or freeze to death when they are too old to work, even when the economy takes a downturn. SS accomplishes this well.
It also subsidizes the income of many who do not technically need it especially if they would have been able to invest it elsewhere.
It isn’t that big a deal what happened to the SS taxes above that needed to make sure everyone survives in old age. It’s important now, because I have paid more than 6 figures into the fund and do not think it equitable if I should receive much less than the baby boomers when I retire.
(As a hijack to the hijack, I also don’t want SS to be privatized because that’s just a giveaway to big investment firms. Either give me back most of my money and reduce my taxes, or keep it as is. I can invest it on my own without a handful of investment firms locking in huge management fees off the top much like Debit card banks do with welfare.)
As far as I remember, FICA starts whenever you start working on the books- which in my case was at 12 or 13 delivering circulars.I’m absolutely certain I was paying FICA (and having income tax withheld) when I was 15 and working in fast food restaurants. If I stop paying in at 60, it will be 45-48 years that I’ve paid in. ( jasg did say 10 years were part time or military)
And that would be great, if participation in SS were voluntary. By forcing me to participate in SS, the government has taken money that could have produced a ROI for me, and put it into what is essentially a Ponzi scheme - current contributors are being used to pay off earlier contributors. If a private business ran like SS, the principals would be in jail.
It also seems inconsistent to me to call it insurance - insurance is taken against something that may or may not happen. My car insurance is issued in case I have an accident. Medical insurance is something I have in case I get sick. Anyone who lives long enough (i.e., doesn’t tragically experience an early death) will certainly reach retirement age. Therefore SS seems much more akin to a pension than an insurance policy, from where I sit.