Fly On Wall Street

Managing your Social Security benefits

For 89 years, Social Security has provided income protection to millions of retirees, people with disabilities, their dependents, and families who’ve lost a wage earner. Social Security benefits have been a key element of federal employees’ overall retirement package since the creation of the Federal Employees Retirement System in 1986.

Switching to the three-part FERS retirement plan made up of a FERS Basic Retirement Benefit (a defined benefit pension), the Thrift Savings Plan (a defined contribution savings plan) and Social Security, was a big change from the single benefit Civil Service Retirement System that exempted workers from paying the FICA tax and did not include an employer sponsored savings plan until the TSP was made available to both CSRS and FERS covered employees in 1987.

This shift from the simple and hands-off model of the single-benefit Civil Service Retirement System has been accompanied by a decline in Social Security benefits relative to pre-retirement earnings.

Social Security is not cast in stone. Benefits and the regulations that implement them are subject to change by Congress at any time. In recent years, they’ve changed in the direction of becoming less generous in replacing wages earned while working. The amendments to Social Security enacted in 1983, that increased the retirement age, made the benefits payable at 62 (for those born in 1960 or later) now only worth 70% of the full benefit, compared with 80% when the full retirement age was 65 (for those born in 1937 and earlier).

Social Security benefits are based on the indexed average of the highest 35 years of wages on which an employee has paid the Social Security tax (known as FICA). The benefit formula is structured in such a way that it provides a greater replacement of pre-retirement wages for lower earners and lesser replacement for high earners.

In 2024, the average Social Security benefit was $1,907 per month or $22,884 per year. For a Social Security beneficiary with average career earnings of $106,002 who was born in 1958, reaching their full retirement age of 66 and 8 months in 2024, this year’s retirement benefit would be approximately $38,241. This is an approximate replacement of 35.2% of their career average earnings.

On the other hand, a Social Security beneficiary with average career earnings of $66,251 who was also born in 1958 would be entitled to a benefit of $28,953. Although this benefit is a smaller dollar amount than the higher wage earner, this is replacing 42.6% of their average lifetime wages.

Social Security benefits are payable as early as age 62. However, the amount of the benefit is permanently reduced by 30% of the full benefit payable at age 67 for those born in 1960 or later.

For example, a worker retiring at age 62 in 2024 who earned $69,455 in 2023, his last year of work, is entitled to a $1,668/month benefit. If they postpone the benefit to age 67, their full retirement age, the benefit would be payable at $2,383/month. Claiming the benefit at age 62 results in a permanent reduction of 30%.

A recentActuarial Note from Social Security explains the Social Security progressive formula as follows:

The Social Security benefit formula uses wage-indexed earnings in computing the benefit payable at the full retirement age that is called the “primary insurance amount” or PIA. Regardless of the age that the benefit is claimed, the PIA formula:

The retired-worker benefit payable at any age is the PIA adjusted for early or delayed retirement. The AIME calculation reflects a worker’s career-average earnings level adjusted for changes in the standard of living over the worker’s career, which is consistent with a wage-indexed denominator for the replacement rate measure.

The 1983 amendments were enacted to permanently solve the problem of funding the Social Security trust fund, known as Old Age and Survivors Disability Insurance. But that didn’t happen. According to Social Security’s chief actuary, lawmakers will face further challenges addressing the OASDI shortfall in the coming years.

In May, the Social Security Office of the Chief Actuary prepared a list of common myths about Social Security. As you make decisions about when to claim your earned Social Security retirement benefit, keep the following facts about Social Security in mind:

Exit mobile version