Newly retired couples could lose $17K a year in Social Security come 2033: What Americans need to know

A typical newly-retired, dual-income couple could lose out on nearly $17,000 annually in Social Security benefits starting in 2033 if Congress does not take action to prevent the program from becoming insolvent, a new report warned.By late 2032, when today’s 61-year-olds will hit the typical retirement age, the Social Security retirement program could be forced to reduce benefits by roughly 22%, according to the Social Security and Medicare Trustees.If that takes place, a dual-earning, low-income couple would face a yearly cut of $10,200; a medium-income couple would see annual losses of $16,900; and high-income couples would lose as much as $22,300 each year, according to a report from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.While the size of the cuts is smaller for low-income couples, it represents a larger share of their total income – hitting them harder.And the longer the program goes without a solution, the worse those cuts will get – growing to 35% by the end of the century, according to the report.“Social Security’s insolvency is no longer a crisis for future lawmakers to deal with; senators elected this year will be in office when Social Security’s retirement fund is exhausted,” the committee said. “Absent Congressional action, retirees in every state will be impacted.The time to act is now.”Lawmakers have been under growing pressure to address the Social Security crisis, as the program supports more than 70 million Americans and remains the primary source of income for millions of retirees.The Old-Age and Survivors Insurance, or OASI, trust fund – which pays benefits to retired workers and the families of deceased workers – is expected to become depleted in the fourth quarter of 2032, according to the report.OASI is mainly funded through payroll taxes.

But Social Security has been increasingly paying out more than it collects – forcing the trust fund to tap into its reserves – as the massive Baby Boomer generation retires...

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Publisher: New York Post

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