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Does the Social Security Earnings Test Affect Labor Supply and Benefits Receipt?

by Jonathan Gruber and Peter Orszag November 2000

WP#2000-7  

Abstract 

On April 7, 2000, President Clinton signed into law the “Senior Citizens Freedom to Work Act of 2000,” which eliminated the unpopular earnings test that applied to those over the Social Security normal age of retirement (currently age 65). The earnings test, a version of which still applies to those ages 62-64, reduces immediate payments to beneficiaries whose labor income exceeds a given threshold. Although benefits are subsequently increased to compensate for any such reduction, the earnings test is typically viewed as a tax on working. As a result, it is commonly viewed as an important disincentive to paid work for older Americans. For example, when President Clinton signed the legislation that removed the earnings test for beneficiaries at or above the normal retirement age, he noted, “because of the Social Security retirement earnings test, the system withholds benefits from over 800,000 older working Americans and discourages countless more – no one knows how many – from actually seeking work.” Similarly, Alan Greenspan recently stated that with the elimination of the earning test, “the presumption, of course, is that you'll get an increase in the number of retired people coming back into the work force.”...

For full paper in PDF

Jonathan Gruber is a Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Peter Orszag is President of Sebago Associates, an economics and public policy consulting firm, and a lecturer in macroeconomics at the University of California at Berkeley. The research reported herein was performed, in part, pursuant to a grant from the U.S. Social Security Administration (SSA) funded as part of the Retirement Research Consortium. Gruber also acknowledges financial support from the National Institute on Aging and the National Science Foundation. The opinions and conclusions are solely those of the authors and should not be construed as representing the opinions or policy of SSA or any agency of the Federal Government or the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. The authors are grateful to Michael Frakes, Cindy Perry, and Diane Whitmore for excellent research assistance.