I have some opinions about Social Security, but I’ll try to keep them out of this. And I’m not an expert. I could be wrong on something here. This is how I understand it…
Social Security is, indeed, self-funded. There is not a Social Security account with my name on it. Social Security is a pay as you go system. Social Security is now, and has been generating a surplus.
All of those statements I believe are true. The system works the way it works. Some people define it differently, I think, in an effort to mischaracterize the system for a political objective.
It is a perfectly reasonable position to say “I don’t want to pay Social Security because I would invest that money and provide for my own retirement. I believe I would benefit financially from that arrangement”. In fact, I am quite sure that I would get a “better deal” investing for my own retirement. That is not the premise Social Security operates under, however. It has been suggested by some that it should be restructured to work more that way. President Bush proposed that we invest the money collected for Social Security in the stock market. I thought it was a good idea at the time, and done right, could still be a good idea. However, the large losses in the market we saw a couple of years ago do make you wonder if it would have really worked out very well.
But if you want Social Security to go away because you think it would benefit you, or most people, or whatever, than that’s how it should be said. It should not be included in an argument about balancing the budget. Cutting Social Security dramatically could lead to dramatically reduced pay-roll tax. It would not do anything to balance the budget since the Social Security budget is separate, and more than balanced.
When introduced, as I understand it, Social Security was structured as more of a traditional pension. When the Great Depression hit, it no longer worked. Too many people applying for benefits the program promised than it could pay for. So they changed it to a pay as you go system. People pay with a pay-roll tax that is directly applied to current demands on the system. Using terms like “bankrupt” when talking about Social Security are intentionally misleading. It makes it appear to be an investment program. It is not. It can’t go “bankrupt” as most people commonly use that word. If you want to find particulars on the history of Social Security I’m sure it’s on the google, or the Wikipedia. But I think I have the broad strokes right.
Social Security has undergone many, many adjustments over the years to keep the funding at a level that will provide for the expense- plus a little just to be safe. If more and more people draw benefits, as many predict will happen now that the Baby Boomers retire, it can become underfunded. If that happens, we either need to adjust the pay-roll tax charged to cover the expenses or adjust the benefits to match the available funds. Either way, it is a self-funded system. Only money collected specifically for Social Security is spent on Social Security. In fact, I believe in recent years, money collected for Social Security has been spent on other things.