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Adjusting Social Security for Increasing Life Expectancy: Effects on Progressivity

August 16, 2010
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Working Paper by Courtney Monk, John A. Turner, and Natalia A. Zhivan

Abstract

Achieving long-run Social Security solvency requires addressing rising life expectancy.  Increasing the Full Retirement Age (FRA), while holding the Early Entitlement Age (EEA) fixed, could be effective but eventually will result in replacement rates that are viewed by many as too low.  A possible policy to prop up replacement rates is to raise the EEA, which has been age 62 for more than 40 years.  However, an increase in the EEA introduces unfairness because the variation in life expectancy across socioeconomic groups is positively correlated with lifetime income.  Using data from the Health and Retirement Study to investigate how earnings relate to mortality risk and health limitations, this project explores the possibility of constructing a flexible FRA that could preserve or even enhance the progressivity of Social Security benefits.  If life expectancy were correlated with lifetime income, Social Security policy could use the AIME (Average Indexed Monthly Earnings) to target policies that are more equitable for people with both lower lifetime income and lower life expectancy…

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Author(s)
Headshot of Courtney Monk
Courtney Monk
Headshot of John A. Turner
John A. Turner
Headshot of Natalia A. Zhivan
Natalia A. Zhivan
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Executive Summary
Citation

Monk, , John A. Turner, and Natalia A. Zhivan. 2010. "Adjusting Social Security for Increasing Life Expectancy: Effects on Progressivity" Working Paper 2010-9. Chestnut Hill, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

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Associated Project(s)
  • BC10-06
Topics
Social Security
Publication Type
Working Paper
Publication Number
WP#2010-9
Sponsor
U.S. Social Security Administration
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