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Social Security and Total Replacement Rates in Disability and Retirement

May 15, 2017
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Working Paper by Mashfiqur R. Khan, Matthew S. Rutledge, and Geoffrey T. Sanzenbacher

Abstract

Social Security provides higher replacement rates to disability insurance beneficiaries than retired beneficiaries. This fact reflects two factors: 1) Disability Insurance (SSDI) beneficiaries have lower career earnings, and Social Security benefits are progressive; and 2) SSDI benefits are not reduced for claiming early. This project uses the 1992-2010 waves of the Health and Retirement Study linked to Social Security Administration earnings records to decompose the differences between the Social Security replacement rates for retired worker and SSDI beneficiaries into these two factors. The project also examines how the total replacement rate – which accounts for other sources of income in addition to Social Security – differs between retirees and SSDI beneficiaries to capture the difference in overall retirement security between the two groups. The results indicate that about half of the 10-percentage-point advantage in Social Security replacement rates for SSDI beneficiaries is due to the actuarial adjustment applied to retirement benefits, implying that career earnings are not that different between retired workers and SSDI beneficiaries. But total replacement rates are substantially lower for SSDI beneficiaries, which indicates that, despite Social Security’s vital role in providing a reliable income source, SSDI beneficiaries have much lower post-career well-being than retired workers.

Social Security sign in a garden
Social Security sign in a garden
Author(s)
Headshot of Mashfiqur R. Khan
Mashfiqur R. Khan
Headshot of Matthew S. Rutledge
Matthew S. Rutledge
Headshot of Geoffrey T. Sanzenbacher
Geoffrey T. Sanzenbacher
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Citation

Khan, Mashfiqur R., Matthew S. Rutledge, and Geoffrey T. Sanzenbacher. 2017. "Social Security and Total Replacement Rates in Disability and Retirement" Working Paper 2017-6. Chestnut Hill, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

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Topics
Social Security
Publication Type
Working Paper
Publication Number
WP#2017-6
Sponsor
U.S. Social Security Administration
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This paper is also published through the NBER's Disability Research Center.
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