The go-broke dates for Medicare and Social Security have been pushed back as an improving economy has contributed to changed projected depletion dates, according to the annual Social Security and Medicare trustees report Monday.

Still, officials warn that policy changes are needed lest the programs become unable to pay full benefits to retiring Americans.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    All we need to do is get rid of the cap on income and it would immediately have more money than we need.

    If someone makes more than the cap, they can afford to keep paying it

    • ccunning@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      But that means the well off would be paying in; not just the poor.

      What is this some sort of socialist financial security plan?

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I’m making enough now that I hit the cap, and I’m annoyed by it. I don’t need social security, but the less fortunate do. It’s so backwards. I should be paying more into it.

    • Pacattack57@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Billionaires should be putting millions into SS every year. It’s outrageous that that’s not happening.

  • kikutwo@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Wild idea, how about taking care of the trust funds instead of paying for bombs for Israel?

    • FirstCircle
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      1 month ago

      My thoughts exactly. Somehow, year after year, we can always come up with $800B+ for the offense budget ($842B FY2024) and that never gets seriously questioned, despite the US not being technically at war with any other major or minor powers. The offense budget is always a “must pass” proposition, whereas spending that actually helps Americans, like Medicare, Medicaid, and SS, are treated/portrayed as some sort of obscene “entitlements” that only the most profligate and immoral nations would ever direct tax money to. Those, and any kind of non-military infrastructure, are just examples of coddling the undeserving citizenry. Investing in the means to kill “foreigners”, in contrast, is money well spent!

      The whole “standing army” paradigm needs to be scrapped and the sooner the better.

      • feannag@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        On the flip side, the DoD is the biggest socialist organization in the government and employs literally millions of Americans. And while the US isn’t at war, they have a lot of international allies that they support and prop up. (that being said, the defense budget is pretty obscene. And the support of Israel is maybe not the best way to spend it.)

        • FirstCircle
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          1 month ago

          Yes, the Department of Offense IS a socialist organization. But the fact that it has to do with offense and killing and ‘projecting power’ and bribing ‘friendlies’ with money and weapons while scaring ‘unfriendlies’ with the same, does not whitewash it into acceptability. We could, and should, take that roughly $850B/yr and plow it into domestic infrastructure, public R&D (no patents or other encumbrances), education, public health care, social supports (such as Medicare/SS), the Arts, basic research, the sciences (climate, space, etc), public housing and clean energy generation to name a few things. We could do all this if it weren’t for the fact that in the US the only acceptable form of public spending is public spending on weapons of war, on the means of bullying and killing those who we don’t like or who won’t cooperate with us. By all means, we should keep up the socialist spending, but it should be directed in such a way as to improve the lives of the citizens directly, not just as hypothetical trickle-down improvements from making ever more deadly and expensive killing technologies.

          Just a few hours from me is the Grand Coulee Dam, built in the 1930s and one of the Wonders of the World. There’s no reason that we couldn’t be engaged on projects of this scope and size all the time, but nope, that’s evil socialism, and big government-funded projects are only acceptable in America if they directly have to do with providing us with new or better weapons to wield against Those People (foreigners mainly).

  • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Hmm. 2036. It’s 2024 now. I’m 47… :: counts on fingers and toes :: Nope, still not going to help.

  • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    The average person makes 65k

    Social security is 12.4%

    Medicare is 2.9%

    Social Security is 8.19k

    Medicare is 1.885k

    Average person pays 10k a year to SS and Medicare.

    Retirement age is 67

    Start work at 18, 49 years of work.

    S&P500 has returned an average of 10.64% apr for the last 100 years. 16.5% last 5 years.

    30-year morgage is ~7.5%

    Let’s just assume the person could put extra money towards their mortgage, gaining 7.5% apr.

    10k/12= 833.33 per month

    833.33 a month at 7.5% apr for 30 years is 1.02M

    833.33 a month at 10% apr for 49 years is 10.41M

    Government takes 1-10M from the average American retirement account to give them SS and Medicare.

    Let’s say you live until 80. Average life expectancy is ~77.5. Means you have 13 years in retirement.

    Average SS payment is 1,864.52 a month. 22,374.24 a year.

    13 years of 22,374.24 is 290,865.12.

    Average person is losing 750k-9.75M for retirement.

    Medicare is a whole other beast but unless you’re going to pay 750k+ on medical expenses in retirement, it’s not going to benefit you.

    Even with Medicare you have to pay premiums, deductibles, copayments, and coinsurance. So it’s not like it’s all covered for “free”.

    SS is a government ran ponzi scheme. Anyone else doing it would be a crooked investor.

    I get that minimum wage is $7.25 and that’s 15k a year. They are paying 2k a year for SS. They will most likely benefit from the system.

    But the average American shouldn’t be footing so much of the bill and not seeing any benefits.

    It’s crazy

    • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      You’re simply describing the skewed tax burden placed upon the middle and lower classes. Rich people should be paying more. Social security isn’t an investment fund and shouldn’t be an investment fund.

      • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        We administer retirement, disability, survivor, and family benefits, and enroll individuals in Medicare.

        Social Security provides retirement income for almost every American worker.

        Ssa.gov

        An investment fund is a supply of capital belonging to numerous investors, used to collectively purchase securities, while each investor retains ownership and control of their own shares.

        Investopedia.com

        The only thing not making it an investment fund is that the government forcefully takes the money and you don’t own the money after it is taken.

        The average person gets the majority of their retirement income from SS.

        Ask the average person what SS is. They will say that it is a retirement fund. What is a retirement fund? An investment fund.

        Social insurance, as conceived by President Roosevelt, would address the permanent problem of economic security for the elderly by creating a work-related, contributory system in which workers would provide for their own future economic security through taxes paid while employed.

        Ssa.gov

        • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Ask the average person what SS is. They will say that it is a retirement fund. What is a retirement fund? An investment fund.

          Sorry but asking random people what something is might make for funny late night TV but it’s not how you define things.