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How Much Pre-Retirement Income Does Social Security Replace?

by Alicia H. Munnell and Mauricio Soto November 2005

IB#36  

Introduction 

Do today's retirees have sufficient income to meet their needs? One common way to address this question is to determine a household's "replacement rate." The replacement rate gauges the extent to which retirement income allows workers to maintain their pre-retirement standard of living. In the U.S. retirement income system, Social Security is the single most important source for most people. It provides a basic level of replacement, upon which individuals can build through additional saving. This brief addresses the question of how much pre-retirement income Social Security replaces for current recipients. Subsequent briefs will provide a more comprehensive evaluation of replacement rates by including income from employer-sponsored pensions, other savings, and housing equity, as well as Social Security.

The first section of this brief explains the concept of a replacement rate and discusses how much people need for a comfortable retirement. The second section describes how Social Security replacement rates are constructed for this analysis and then reports results for individuals and households. The final section summarizes the key findings.

For full paper in PDF

For related working paper  

Alicia H. Munnell is the Peter F. Drucker Professor of Management Sciences in Boston College's Carroll School of Management and Director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. Mauricio Soto is an Economics graduate student at Boston College and a Senior Research Associate at the Center. Natalia A. Jivan, Marric Buessing, and Nadezhda Karamcheva did a fabulous job programming the Health and Retirement Study. Andrew Varani, Jamie Lee, and Reed Hatch provided extraordinary research assistance.