|
|
|
|
|
by Thrymr
4620 days ago
|
|
That's because Social Security has been running a surplus for many years (until 2010). The question is whether the US government, which already spent that surplus, but gave a bunch of bonds as promissory notes to repay, will actually do so. Payroll taxes were meant to prepare for the baby boom retirement, and were enough to do so, but that money is gone, not in a "lock box". |
|
It's possible people will choose not to do so, but that's not a matter of Social Security being insolvent. That's a matter of people simply not wanting to keep the promises, because they want lower taxes or something. If Social Security is not repaid, then payroll taxes will be retroactively converted to a regressive general income tax, where only income under $114k is taxed, which would be rather bad.