Fiscal Effects of Social Security Reform in the United States

TitleFiscal Effects of Social Security Reform in the United States
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2003
AuthorsCoile, C, Gruber, J
Series TitleCenter for Retirement Research at Boston College Working Papers
Document Number2003-5
InstitutionCenter for Retirement Research at Boston College
CityBoston
Call Numberwp_2003/Coile-Gruber2003-05.pdf
KeywordsPublic Policy, Retirement Planning and Satisfaction, Social Security
Abstract

Social Security is the largest social insurance program in the U.S., and has been shown to be a major determinant of the labor supply decisions of older workers. As such, reforming the Social Security system can have two fiscal impacts: a mechanical effect through changing the rules on benefits entitlements or taxation, and a behavioral effect through individual responses to these changes in benefits or taxes. We build a simulation model that computes these effects for major reforms to the system, building on estimated retirement responses to changing net Social Security entitlements. We then estimate the fiscal impact of reform for the 1931-1941 cohort of workers represented by the Health and Retirement Survey. We find that raising the early and normal retirement age by three years would reduce net costs for this cohort by roughly 30 , and that moving to a much higher benefit level would raise net costs by roughly 55 . Importantly, we find that in both cases the behavioral impacts on net costs are relatively small, at most one-third, and generally less than one-fifth of the total. The reason for these small effects is that the U.S. Social Security system is roughly actuarially fair, so that delaying or inducing retirement has relatively little impact on system balances; most of the effects that do arise are due to changes in general income and consumption taxes.

Notes

RDA

URLhttps://crr.bc.edu/working-papers/fiscal-effects-of-social-security-reform-in-the-united-states/
Endnote Keywords

Retirement Behavior/Public Policy/Social Security

Endnote ID

10212

Citation Key5539