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  • - [Narrator] You're looking at a chart of the US population,

  • and these are the baby boomers.

  • This year, a record number

  • of them will reach traditional retirement age.

  • By 2030, they'll all be 65 or older.

  • This is creating a fiscal problem

  • because fewer taxable workers means less money

  • for social security.

  • - If Congress does nothing, we're gonna hit a major crisis.

  • - [Narrator] Here's how this demographic shift

  • threatens the future

  • of one of the country's most important government programs

  • and what can be done to fix it.

  • Baby boomers or those born between 1946

  • and 1964 have been propping up the US economy for decades.

  • - Their mere numbers contributed for a long time

  • to rapid economic growth

  • and because every worker contributed social security

  • that made social security look very healthy.

  • - [Narrator] But as boomers started exiting the workforce

  • in 2008, the number of retirees grew rapidly.

  • - Not only do you have more retirees collecting benefits

  • for more years, you have fewer young people

  • entering the workforce because birth rates were lower

  • for their parents' generation,

  • and that creates a squeeze on both directions.

  • Higher expenses from all those retirees living longer,

  • lower payroll tax revenue

  • from fewer people entering the labor force

  • because of those declining birth rates.

  • - [Narrator] This puts a lot of pressure on social security

  • and without policy change,

  • projections show the trust funds will be depleted in 2034.

  • - There's a misconception out there

  • that when the social security trust fund is exhausted,

  • the system is somehow bankrupt and there's no money.

  • Social security is an integral part

  • of the federal government,

  • and as long as the federal government is not bankrupt,

  • social security is not bankrupt.

  • - What's really happening is the program is running out

  • of treasury bonds,

  • which are basically IOUs from the government.

  • For many years, social security was taking in more money

  • than it needed to pay out in benefits, so it lent money

  • to the government to use for other programs,

  • and it got IOUs in return.

  • - Around 10 years ago though, that situation flipped around.

  • For the last decade, we've been paying out more in benefits

  • than we've been collecting in social security revenue.

  • - [Narrator] But because the program

  • had so many IOUs stashed away from previous years,

  • it's been able to keep paying benefits in full

  • by cashing in on those IOUs.

  • - Right now, there's roughly $3 trillion in IOUs,

  • but each year that $3 trillion stash

  • gets a little bit smaller.

  • By the year 2034, all of the IOUs will have been cashed in.

  • - That means retirees would see overnight

  • about a 25% benefit cut.

  • - [Narrator] This number will likely increase as the number

  • of workers per retiree continues to fall.

  • - Simply because we're not about

  • to go bankrupt doesn't mean there's no problem.

  • There very much is a problem.

  • - [Narrator] Studies show that the majority

  • of Americans rely on these monthly benefits checks

  • for retirement income.

  • According to census bureau data, about 50% of people

  • between 55 and 66 years old have no retirement savings.

  • - Can you imagine right now if you had

  • to take a 25% reduction in your take home pay,

  • you still have to pay rent.

  • You gotta buy groceries, you gotta pay utilities.

  • - It's especially important for those

  • who don't have college degrees,

  • people on the lower end of the income spectrum.

  • - [Narrator] Fichtner says,

  • when retirees have less retirement income,

  • they also generally spend less money.

  • - That means less economic activity.

  • That means less employment

  • because employers have to lay off people

  • 'cause no longer is that money coming in.

  • It's a ripple effect

  • that could be basically a senior induced recession.

  • - But social security is only meant to replace a percentage

  • of a worker's pre-retirement income

  • based on lifetime earnings.

  • So as much as 78% for very low earners to about 42%

  • for medium earners and 28% for maximum earners.

  • - This is three legged stool we talk about all the time.

  • It's supposed to be social security is one leg,

  • your employer provided pension

  • is a second leg and your personal savings a third.

  • Well, social security is financial challenges.

  • We don't have pensions really anymore.

  • About 10% of the population has pensions

  • and then it's hard to save on your own

  • when you've gotta pay off student loans

  • and housing costs are so high.

  • - [Narrator] About half of Americans

  • do have retirement accounts like 401Ks and IRAs,

  • but those are all subject to market risk.

  • - I hear a lot, well, those are 65 year olds.

  • Why do I have to worry about the boomers today?

  • Well, this impacts every generation that's coming up behind.

  • - They might not be asked

  • to pay a slightly higher payroll tax.

  • More important, they might be asked

  • to work a little bit longer.

  • - [Narrator] And like most things in the economy,

  • social security's funding shortfall isn't an isolated issue.

  • - It's one of the reasons the federal budget deficits

  • is as large as it is.

  • It means that we have to borrow money,

  • which means issuing bonds.

  • That tends to put up pressure on interest rates,

  • which means it's harder to afford a house.

  • It means that Congress might have

  • to cut spending on other programs like the military

  • or the environment in order to make sure

  • that there's enough money for social security.

  • - [Narrator] So what needs to happen to put social security

  • on more sound footing?

  • Congress needs to pass a law.

  • - Congress has stood still

  • and not enhanced social security since Richard Nixon.

  • - [Narrator] When and what kind of law,

  • that we still don't know.

  • There's been a number of proposed solutions over the years.

  • - This legislation demands

  • that the wealthiest people in this country

  • start paying their fair share of taxes,

  • - But policymakers generally disagree on whether

  • to raise taxes or cut benefits.

  • - You'll have two approaches to how to solve this problem,

  • and you're not gonna do it.

  • - There's probably no single magic bullet,

  • which will put social security on a long-term footing.

  • Instead, Congress is probably going to have

  • to look at a variety of steps

  • which will collectively fix the problem.

  • - [Narrator] But economists don't expect action

  • to be taken anytime soon.

  • - Everybody, including on Capitol Hill,

  • knows that social security has a problem.

  • Nobody, especially those in Capitol Hill,

  • are prepared to do anything about it.

  • - As we all apparently agree, social security

  • and Medicare is off the books now, right?

  • They're not to be smart. (clapping and cheering)

  • - We all would wish that politicians would show

  • the political courage necessary to tackle this now

  • and not wait until the 11th hour.

  • Benefits and changes

  • to retirement programs take a while to phase in.

  • One of the last major reforms we had

  • for social security were the 1983 reforms.

  • - [Narrator] Those amendments raised the retirement age

  • to 67, but it took nearly 40 years to phase them in.

  • - There is a 10 year window,

  • but we don't have 10 years to act.

  • - There has to be some kind of a legislative solution

  • that comes along between now and then.

  • By law, the program can't borrow anywhere else.

  • The program's too important, too popular for it

  • to basically be allowed to run out of money.

- [Narrator] You're looking at a chart of the US population,

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