Don't rely solely on Social Security for your
retirement needs. It is an iffy proposition since the percentage of
people 65 and older is increasing rapidly.
The Big Social Security Myth: It ensures that we?re financially ?secure? in our later years.
Fact:
Its own financial future is in peril. In other words, don?t count on
Social Security offering the same financial security in 20 or 30 years
as it does for today's retirees.
It?s
hard to imagine surviving retirement without the comfort of monthly
Social Security checks arriving in the mail. Before 1935, Americans did
exactly that, however. It took the abject poverty of the elderly during
the Great Depression to convince Congress to approve President
Roosevelt's plan for basic subsistence payments to senior citizens.
The Salad Days Are Over
The
program?s salad days started in 1972, when benefits were linked to the
nation?s inflation rate, guaranteeing recipients that their monthly
payments would rise with each year?s cost of living. The party?s over.
The burden on working Americans grows each year. Payroll taxes siphon
6.2% of the first $94,200 a person earns in 2006-- an all-time high.
It Cuts Both Ways
From
a financial planning perspective, Social Security is a double-edged
sword. The program has a positive impact because it provides a basic
level of retirement income. The flip side is that Social Security
engenders a false sense of security, lulling many people into thinking
they do not need to work very hard and sacrifice very much to save for
retirement because those government checks will just keep rolling in.
Times
have changed since 1935, and for the worse. When Social Security was
started, 16 workers were paying into the system for every retiree
receiving benefits. Now, only three workers contribute per retiree and
by the year 2020 the ratio will be two to one -- two workers paying in
for every retiree taking out. Even with several changes enacted in
recent years to address the shortfall, Social Security still can't
provide the same level of benefits 20 years from now that it does today.
Charting Your Own ?Survival? Route
What
does this mean for your retirement planning? You should count on
getting something, but "something" is not going to increase with
inflation. Your retirement benefits depend on the number of fiscal
quarters (or three-month increments) you have worked, the amount of your
annual income in each of the last 35 years of your working life, and
your age at retirement.
The higher your
earned income, the more your monthly benefits will be, although these
increases are not proportional. For example, let?s assume that you are
single and your lifetime income inched upward from year to year. If you
received $30,000 during your last year of work, your monthly benefits
would start at somewhere around $1,100. But if you double your income to
$60,000, the benefits only increase about 15% to $1,250.
Benefits
provide a minimum level of coverage, but don't expect to live on Social
Security alone. The average monthly payment in 2005 was $1,150. Women
are particularly vulnerable to lower benefits -- they often leave the
work force for periods of time to raise children, and they generally
received lower pay than men throughout their working lives.
Get A Social Security Statement
Regardless
of your exact future benefits, Social Security is still an important
part of your retirement planning. The best way to start is by finding
out your estimated benefits through the Social Security?s Internet
request for a statement on its website. The Social Security Administration also is now sending out annual updates of the statement, sent shortly after your birthday.
The
report shows your estimated annual benefits at age 62, at your "normal"
retirement age (65 to 67, depending on your year of birth),and at age
70. These are estimates of future benefits, with an actual dollar amount
at that time. If a projected benefit is $1,500 a month at age 65, that
may sound terrific to you now because you?re thinking of what $1,500
buys today.
Taking Steps To Protect Yourself
There
are some important steps to take when you get your report. First, check
your reported earnings for each year you worked. Just like any other
bureaucracy, mistakes are made.
Second,
take a good look at how your benefit varies according to your retirement
age. If you retire at 62, generally you will only get 80% of your
benefits at normal retirement age. Conversely, you will get an extra 8%
for each year you work past your normal retirement age. If you?re
married, your non-working spouse will get 37.5% of your benefits if you
retire early and 50% at your normal retirement age.
Remember
that the normal retirement age is no longer necessarily 65; as of the
year 2000, it's begun to rise. Looking at your various retirement
benefits, you can figure out the best time for you to start taking
Social Security.
Third, decide how much
you want to rely on Social Security. The younger you are, the more
likely it is that your benefits will be less than projected. As a safety
measure, you might assume your actual annual benefit would be 75% of
current estimates. Whatever your method, plug that Social Security
number into your retirement needs analysis to see how much you will have
to save on your own to provide the income you want. Then make a plan to
save even more than that, if you can.
Don?t Pick Up That Phone
One
final tip: When you deal with the Social Security Administration, do it
in writing. If doing so is impossible, go to a Social Security office.
Use the telephone as a last resort. Whether in person or by phone, take
copious notes, and get the employee?s name and ID number with whom you
are dealing.
You won?t be penalized if
you receive incorrect information from the employee and you have proof.
If you are not happy with the Social Security Administration's decision
about your situation, you can file a ?reconsideration.? You can also ask
to have any deadlines waived until your problems are resolved.
It?s Your Money
Social
Security was never designed to pay for a life of luxury, but even with
its current fiscal woes, you can probably count on something when you
retire.
There are several "rescue" plans
on the table now, allowing workers to invest some of their Social
Security contributions themselves, allowing the federal government to
invest some of the programs' billions in the stock market, and making
other massive changes to the system. Whatever the outcome, it?s clear
that the days of guaranteed, steadily increasing benefits are over.