An “elastic” Earliest Eligibility Age for Social Security
نویسندگان
چکیده
In the early 1980s, Congress responded to the Social Security program’s long-term financing shortfall, in part, by raising the Full Retirement Age (FRA) from 65 to 67. When fully phased in, for those who turn 62 in 2022, workers will have to wait an additional two years to get the same monthly benefit. If they do not postpone claiming, the increase in the FRA will cut their benefits by about 13 percent. Congress did not change the earliest age at which workers can claim. This Earliest Eligibility Age (EEA) remains 62. When the increase in the FRA is fully phased in, workers who claim at 62 will get 70 percent, rather than 80 percent, of their FRA benefit. This has raised concerns that benefits claimed at the EEA will be too low, especially as retirees age and other sources of income decline. One response would be to raise the EEA from 62 to 64, in line with the two-year rise in the FRA. There are, however, two important objections to an increase in the EEA. The primary concern is that it would create hardship for those unable to work
منابع مشابه
A PROGRAM FOR RESEARCH ON SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC DIMENSIONS OF AN AGING POPULATION The Impact of Age Pension Eligibility Age on Retirement and Program Dependence: Evidence from an Australian Experiment
Identifying the effect of the financial incentives created by social security systems on the retirement behaviour of individuals requires exogenous variation in program parameters. In this paper we study the 1993 Australian Age Pension reform which increased the eligibility age for women to access the social security benefit. We find economically significant responses to the increase in the Age...
متن کاملThe Impact of Age Pension Eligibility Age on Retirement and Program Dependence: Evidence from an Australian Experiment
Population aging poses a challenge to the fiscal sustainability of social security systems around the world. As Baby-boomer generations approach retirement, governments have begun reforming key parameters of the social security systems. However, the behavioural and welfare impacts of many reforms are not well understood in part due to the di culty of isolating exogenous variation in program par...
متن کاملSocial Security , Institutional Settings , and Labor Supply 1
We analyze crosscountry panel data to examine the effect of changes in the social security systems on the labor supply of men over 50 years of age. Our findings indicate that the labor supply of older men rises with the social security eligibility age, increased pension rates for later retirement, and the defined contribution replacement rate. However their participation rate falls with increas...
متن کاملEarly retirees under Social Security: health status and economic resources.
Some proposals to change the Social Security program to ensure long-run solvency would reduce or eliminate benefits for early retirees. This article documents the health and financial resources of Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) beneficiaries aged 62-64. It identifies a substantial minority of early retirees who might be economically vulnerable if either the early eligibility age or norm...
متن کاملHow raising the age of eligibility for Social Security and Medicare might affect the disability insurance and Medicare programs.
The normal age of retirement is scheduled to increase to 67 by 2022, and several proposals to increase it to age 70 are being considered. The Medicare eligibility age is not scheduled to increase under current law, but proposals to raise it in step with the retirement age were recently considered by the National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare (1999). This article examines how r...
متن کامل