Social Security Solvency, Solved

 | May 19, 2023 02:07AM ET

I’m going to depart temporarily from my usual inflation-focused column to write about something that affects all Americans, and propose a simple solution to a bedeviling problem – a solution that is guaranteed to work.

The issue is Social Security. According to the US debt clock , which keeps track of this sort of thing, the present value of the (off balance sheet) Social Security obligation is $22.8trillion. What has happened is that over the years since the Social Security program was created, people are living longer and benefits have increased; a secondary problem that will someday solve itself is that the population pyramid in the US is almost inverted as the baby boom generation ages. Consequently, current workers have to contribute quite a bit to support retired workers, and this will get worse in the near future (since Social Security is not a savings program but a transfer program, the current workers plus taxpayers pay for retirees).

The full retirement age has been raised occasionally in the past, each time to ‘fix’ the system, and each time under a firestorm of controversy. Raising the retirement age temporarily improves the fiscal position of the program, but ultimately fails because people are living longer. That’s a good thing, but it’s really bad as the ‘retired’ population gets bigger and bigger and the US population growth rate grows more and more slowly.

To demonstrate the problem and my solution, I ran some relatively simple simulations. I started with the current US population distribution by age.[1] For each subsequent year, I applied the 2020 period life table for the Social Security area population, as used in the 2023 Trustees Report.[2] For simplicity I used the females table. For new births, I took the prior year’s 25-year-old cohort and multiplied by 1.1, which resulted in an average population growth rate of 0.3% per year (which was roughly the low set in the pandemic, so very conservative). This takes the population of the US from 332mm in 2021 to 815mm, three centuries from now. (Bear with me; I know it’s ridiculous to project anything 300 years from now but this is for demonstration purposes).