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by dsr_ 4040 days ago
It appears that you are misunderstanding Social Security, and you may think that the US federal government plays by the same set of fiscal rules that a household, a corporation or a state has to use.

This article from the Washington Post can help: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/fact-checker/wp/2014/01/...

2 comments

That article doesn't actually counter what the OP says. In fact it ends by stating that SS is being more strained and giving diminishing returns as time passes by, which sounds disturbingly like a ponzi scheme. It's unsustainable by design even without free-riders, much less with min-maxers gaming the system to not put anything in.
I don't know why you think social security is necessarily unsustainable. It's been running a massive surplus since the 80s. Unfortunately it was borrowed from to finance wars in the middle east, but that's not a problem with social security.

http://www.accuracy.org/release/social-security-has-a-large-...

>It's been running a massive surplus since the 80s.

When the boomers were in their prime earning years, supporting a smaller, aged cohort.

>SS is being more strained

What article did you read this in?

>giving diminishing returns as time passes by

You mean that we're choosing to pay less to SS beneficiaries? SS is not an investment vehicle.

>It's unsustainable

It's entirely sustainable. What article are you referring to here?

So you are saying what I said is not true?
I am. It sounds completely made up and has no references. I'm assuming it's based in "common sense."

Your level of benefit is based on the average of how much you made (adjusted for inflation) during your best 35 years.

Then why do we need to continue contributing after working past 10 year if we already maxed out?