Should We Raise Social Security's Earliest Eligibility Age?

TitleShould We Raise Social Security's Earliest Eligibility Age?
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2004
AuthorsMunnell, AH, Meme, KB, Jivan, NA, Cahill, KE
Series TitleCenter for Retirement Research at Boston College Briefs
Document NumberIB#18
InstitutionCenter for Retirement Research at Boston College
CityBoston
Call Numberpubs_2004_Munnell_etal_CRR-IB18.pdf
KeywordsSocial Security
Abstract

Social Security’s Earliest Eligibility Age (EEA) allows one to claim reduced benefits as early as age 62. For full benefits, individuals must wait until the Normal Retirement Age (NRA), which was traditionally 65 but is gradually increasing to 67. So, Americans have a choice to make when they reach their early 60s: claim a reduced Social Security benefit right away or delay until some further date and receive a larger benefit. The reduction for claiming benefits early is designed to be actuarially fair, i.e. monthly benefits are lowered by an amount that offsets the longer period for which they will be received. The total amount that the average person can expect to receive over his or her lifetime thus does not depend on when benefits are claimed…

URLhttps://crr.bc.edu/briefs/should-we-raise-social-securitys-earliest-eligibility-age/
Endnote Keywords

Social Security

Endnote ID

12562

Citation Key5593