Social Security is headed for reduced benefits, and no amount of political rhetoric or even tax increases will solve that problem. The numbers do not lie.
For decades now, younger generations of Americans have believed that Social Security will be defunct by the time we retire. It is hopelessly underfunded, so that seems pretty reasonable.
What specifically do people expect to happen with Social Security?
I think it's unlikely to be dissolved anytime soon and I also don't think people will tolerate the benefits simply being inflated away.
I see two reforms as highly likely:
- Means testing (initially set at a very high level, but then it will creep down)
- Increasing eligibility age to collect (progressively raise the age until the program is solvent)
There's an entirely different reform I'd prefer be considered:
- Enact some sort of elder care, similar to child care, so that families are on the hook to provide for their elderly members before taxpayers are.
NOTdie young and Socialism security will prosper for the next generation