Because of the imbalance between promised benefits and available taxes, some reform of Social Security is inevitable. At the same time, perceptions of Social Security are changing rapidly as it moves away from a system where all recipients--whether rich or poor--received more in benefits than they paid in taxes, and where those who were richer consistently received larger net transfers than those who were poorer. Reform is most likely to succeed if it returns to basic principles such as progressivity, equity, and efficiency. Although these principles sometime conflict, they also provide much common ground. For example, if Social Security is meant to meet the greatest needs of the elderly, then increasing the retirement age (which mainly affects the younger and richer elderly) would be preferable to removal of the cost-of-living adjustment (which mainly affects the older and poorer elderly). Efficiency and equity principles, in turn, call attention to some groups--second earners in households, those with few employee tax preferences, those who work many years, and elderly workers--whose net benefits are lower than others who should have less claim to Social Security resources.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

social security
20
security
5
retooling social
4
security 21st
4
21st century
4
century imbalance
4
imbalance promised
4
promised benefits
4
benefits taxes
4
taxes reform
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!