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President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law on Aug. 14, 1935. This year, more than 53 million people receive a total of $700 billion in benefits. Retirement benefits average $1,100 a month and disabled workers get an average of $1,065. In 75 years, 122 million people -- one-fourth of the U.S. population -- will be drawing benefits. Social Security is financed by a 6.2 percent payroll tax on wages below $106,800. The tax is paid by workers and matched by employers. Older Americans can apply for early retirement benefits, starting at age 62. They qualify for full benefits if they wait until they turn 66, a threshold that is gradually increasing to 67 for people born in 1960 or later. Social Security would be made solvent for another 75 years if payroll taxes were increased by about 1 percentage point for both workers and employers. It would also be fixed if Congress started taxing all wages, not just those below $106,800. About 23 percent of the shortfall would be gone if Congress gradually increased the full retirement age from 67 to 68, according to the Senate Special Committee on Aging. Nearly a third of the shortfall would disappear if it was gradually increased to 70.
House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio recently suggested increasing the full retirement age to 70. Democrats slammed Boehner, even though House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., made a similar suggestion in a speech the week before. "It's an important program for millions of Americans, tens of millions of Americans, and if we don't fix it, it will not be there," Boehner said later. "I understand that these subjects get to be rather sensitive, and especially in an election year. I was not at all surprised by the attacks that came my way." Among the first to attack Boehner was House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. She was asked later if she was hamstringing Obama's fiscal commission by publicly opposing an increase in the retirement age. "That would be my goal, but I don't think I have that much influence in what they do," Pelosi said. "They are an independent commission appointed by the president. They have to do what they have to do." ___ Online: Senate Special Committee on Aging: http://aging.senate.gov/ss/ssreport2010.pdf
[Associated
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