The Simple Social Security Fix No One is Talking About (No Tax Increases or Benefit Cuts!)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 мар 2024
  • Fixing Social Security is NOT DIFFICULT.
    With two simple tweaks, we could put the system in a surplus and move on to more important issues (although that may not suit the needs of politicians who will never waste a crisis).
    These two small changes will not only ensure Social Security's 100% solvency but also create a significant surplus over the long term.
    🔥🔥 Get the Ultimate Social Security Cheat Sheet! It takes the essential information from the 100,000 page Social Security website and condenses it down to just one page! 🔥🔥
    📍We can show you how to retire with confidence! 📍In our Retirement Roadmap plan, we can help make your retirement savings last longer and reduce your taxes by coordinating your Social Security filing strategy, retirement account withdrawals, and Roth conversions. 📞Schedule your call and see if this plan is a fit for you. www.devincarroll.com/roadmap
    🎤 If you're preparing for retirement or already enjoying it, you'll definitely want to catch my podcast, Big Picture Retirement. Your retirement's success hinges on seeing the "big picture" and tying together your legal, tax, and financial strategies. On the show, we dive deep to offer insights on effective planning, and I'm joined by my co-hosts - attorney John Ross and yours truly, financial planner Devin Carroll. www.bigpictureretirement.com/
    ➡️ Want to hire Devin and his team? -- www.carrolladvisory.com
    Don’t miss my free online workshop, “How to Choose the RIGHT Age to File for Social Security.” In this workshop you’ll learn:
    ✔The Most Important Factors to Consider BEFORE You File for Benefits
    ✔How to Coordinate Your Social Security Filing Decision with Your Other Assets & Income for a Tax Efficient Distribution Strategy
    ✔Why This Is The Biggest Decision of Your Retirement
    Access the workshop today at this link
    www.devincarroll.com/SSessent...
    ➡️ Get a copy of my best-selling book, Social Security Basics, here -- amzn.to/2twsABZ
    ➡️ Social Security Questions? Join my FREE Facebook Group! / 428684237572614
    📜 HEAR YE HEAR YE: Some of my videos contain links to third party products, apps, and services. If you click through, I may receive a small referral fee to my media company (Carroll Media Properties) through their referral program. Rest assured, I only recommend products or services that I believe will be helpful and informative to my audience.
    ⭐⚠️⭐Please read this⭐⚠️⭐
    ⚠️I am not an attorney, SSDI advocate, or affiliated with the Social Security Administration or any other entity of the US Federal Government. I am a practicing financial planner, but I’m not YOUR financial planner and since I don’t really know you, I can’t give you advice. So please don’t take this video as specific advice for your specific situation. Consult your own tax, legal and financial advisors. 🙇🙇🙇🙇🙇
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @DevinCarroll
    @DevinCarroll  2 месяца назад +130

    Lots of comments saying there's no way my wife and I will ever collect $5,500,000 from Social Security. Should I do a video where I detail the math?

    • @johnl9977
      @johnl9977 2 месяца назад

      First, stop Republicans from cutting taxes on the obscenely wealthy and adding them to the deficits. Then, repeal all the "Trickle Down" that Republicans have enacted for the last 40 years. Finally, enact a tax structure for the wealthy that has them paying a higher percentage of their total income in taxes than an average family that works for a living. They currently pay as little as one eighth as much. POOF! no deficits, and Social Security/Medicare are all set with plenty left over for programs that actually help the people of America, not just the wealthy. And for Republicans, who love to clutch their Bibles, this is even Biblical, Luke 12:48.

    • @metalrooves3651
      @metalrooves3651 2 месяца назад

      84,000 A YEAR IF YOU BOTH GET THE MAX...TIMES 24 YEARS IF YOU USE 24 YEARS,,84X24....2 MILLION.....AND i would bet even that is a one in 100,000 recipients!,,5.5 million is plumb silly....yes...prove it!...tge real cure would be to raise the 132,000 max it is paid on per year to 250k,but leave those (someday) payees,at the current high mark(3776 a month).This playing with inflation numbers is silly!

    • @howardfriedman7077
      @howardfriedman7077 2 месяца назад +1

      @@metalrooves3651 He calculated up to age 95 for both he and his wife and likely used average COLAs for that period.

    • @twan102000
      @twan102000 2 месяца назад

      "A smaller raise in the future" -is disingenuous. It is, in effect a failure to keep up with inflation and becoming run over by the "the train", your head sinking below the surface of the water and drowning. An interesting angle would be to take this "excess" as you perceive from yourself and those who benefit more than need, and shift it to those that are struggling due to low benefits from disability and the very real -effective negative wage growth since the 70's. This money would be directly poured into the economy creating overall economic growth rather than sit in the accounts of the wealthy. Inflation is still a factor, no matter how you try to ignore it and "factor it out".
      Your situation is an outlier, the vast majority are barely at or well below livability. The programs original intent and spirit was not to provide an exponential benefit to those that are comfortable, obviously it was to help the bottom rungs. It could be solved easily be raising or eliminating the cap on the wealthy, no real problem -they would not even notice, other than the next yacht would be a few inches shorter. They are not paying their share of tax burden relative to benefit either. Thank you for speaking to the issue!

    • @joev2567
      @joev2567 2 месяца назад +23

      Let see the details on how much you would have if you put your SS taxes into a 401k for 40 years.

  • @shellylofgren
    @shellylofgren 12 дней назад +1269

    More and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.

    • @donna_martins
      @donna_martins 12 дней назад +4

      The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.

    • @robert-1miller
      @robert-1miller 12 дней назад +3

      This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000

    • @ilyaveysman.
      @ilyaveysman. 12 дней назад +3

      Mind if I ask you to recommend this particular coach you using their service?

    • @robert-1miller
      @robert-1miller 12 дней назад +3

      Vivian Jean Wilhelm is her name. She is regarded as a genius in her area and works for Empower Financial Services

    • @ilyaveysman.
      @ilyaveysman. 12 дней назад +2

      I just googled her and I'm really impressed with her credentials; I reached out to her since I need all the assistance I can get. I just scheduled a caII.

  • @CliveBirse
    @CliveBirse 25 дней назад +1109

    My apologies to everyone who have retired and filing social security during this time after putting in all those years of work just to lose everything to a problem you never imagined to happen. It’s so difficult for people who are retired and have no savings or loved ones to fall back on.

    • @Grace.milburn
      @Grace.milburn 25 дней назад +3

      True, It has never been easier to understand how to build your money after retirement than it is right now with the inflation, when you may study and experience a completely variegated market passively by employing a successful portfolio-advisor. The impacts of the U.S. dollar's gain or fall on investments, in my opinion, are complex.

    • @ThomasChai05
      @ThomasChai05 25 дней назад +3

      I fully agree and place great value on my advisor's role in guiding my daily investments. They excel in both long and short strategies, managing risk for potential gains and protection against market downturns. Their access to exclusive insights and in-depth analysis makes exceeding expectations a regular outcome. In the two-plus years I've worked with my advisor, I've gained over 1.2million dollars.

    • @mikegarvey17
      @mikegarvey17 25 дней назад +3

      @@ThomasChai05Mind if I ask you recommend this particular professional you use their service?

    • @ThomasChai05
      @ThomasChai05 25 дней назад +2

      *Gertrude Margaret Quinto* maintains an online presence. Just make a simple search for her name online.

    • @Susanhartman.
      @Susanhartman. 25 дней назад +2

      Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.

  • @mikemccann6556
    @mikemccann6556 Месяц назад +22

    I barely survive on under $1100 a month on SSA payments. I'm disabled and not able to work. Just what cuts do you think I can afford. When I do get a raise they take it all but $5 back by reducing my EBT benefits. I worked all my life paying into social security the whole time and this is what I get.

    • @richardkroll2269
      @richardkroll2269 25 дней назад +1

      I've lived overseas for the last 15 years after I retired and I get the $158 taken out each month for Medicare even though there is no way I could have used the benefit. Thank god where I live is very cheap (or was).

    • @JS-jh4cy
      @JS-jh4cy 5 дней назад +1

      ​@richardkroll2269 where is this, Mexico was cheap so long ago, now shiting and living costs so much more

    • @BrendaRock
      @BrendaRock 5 дней назад +1

      Seems most times I get a little increase in SS they raise my Medicare rate and I lose out.

  • @dr.detroit1514
    @dr.detroit1514 2 месяца назад +23

    From what I read somewhere, Because of the way the Social Security COLA has been calculated, and is not adequate to keep up with inflation even as it is, Seniors have lost over a third of their inflation adjusted buying power since Y2K alone. In essence, seniors income from SS has already been cut, and continues to be cut, significantly. High income seniors of course aren't really affected by this, it's just a little less pocket spending money. But it is absolutely slowly crushing low end seniors, the ones SS was created to help, who are scraping to pay the bills.

    • @victorianmelody46
      @victorianmelody46 Месяц назад +2

      $940 doesn't go far.

    • @bbartlow0307
      @bbartlow0307 Месяц назад +1

      Absolutely correct... and nobody wants to talk about it.

    • @branch_ranch
      @branch_ranch Месяц назад +1

      Removing the income cap would be a great start. And then tax the rich more.

    • @billw8476
      @billw8476 Месяц назад +2

      @@branch_ranch remove the cap on income that is s.s. taxable, but leave the cap on maximum monthly benefits..after all. s.s. only purpose is to keep retired seniors out of POVERTY.....not to pad your million dollar 401k.

    • @branch_ranch
      @branch_ranch Месяц назад

      @@billw8476 that sounds great to me!

  • @orosalsero
    @orosalsero 3 месяца назад +382

    The way to save Social Security, is to have the government stop using it as a personal piggy bank.

    • @wdm213
      @wdm213 2 месяца назад +20

      The irony, consistent with your comment, is that SSI is taxed. And, where does that tax revenue go? The general budget.
      I sacrificed lifestyle along the way to increase my retirement savings plan expecting there would for whatever reason be no SSI.
      I now have enough passive income, and it doesn't take that much, to be in the situation where I lose close to 40% of my SS benefit.
      If the amount of SSI I lose through excess taxes that goes into the general budget would instead go back in the SS bucket, I'm sure there would be a significant improvement in solvency. And I like you would be much much happier if congress would be prohibited from "borrowing" it. Sorry too long.

    • @katen1228
      @katen1228 2 месяца назад +8

      Amen to that!

    • @michaeldickerson873
      @michaeldickerson873 2 месяца назад

      The government cannot fix the problem-the government is the problem!

    • @priscillaross-fox9407
      @priscillaross-fox9407 2 месяца назад

      I deserve to be on SSI but am not. I only get SS benefits.
      "Lifestyle"? I rarely go anywhere other than to my mailbox & back. By the time I get half way back the pain is getting so bad. @@wdm213

    • @DeadCat-42
      @DeadCat-42 2 месяца назад +4

      The way is to realize that GenX is tiny and it should be super easy to pay for. Demographics will fix SSI without any changes at all and anyone who says otherwise is just setting the stage to allow massive cuts.

  • @jimroberts6176
    @jimroberts6176 3 месяца назад +350

    We can't talk about making changes to SS without also talking about making changes to the public pension system-starting with congressional pensions.

    • @randyjerrett3385
      @randyjerrett3385 3 месяца назад +13

      Oh no, we can’t talk about their pension that will always be funded

    • @tonybaile5217
      @tonybaile5217 2 месяца назад

      ... or their Health insurance . They sux@@randyjerrett3385

    • @roberttaira6943
      @roberttaira6943 2 месяца назад +5

      Well said.

    • @johnl9977
      @johnl9977 2 месяца назад

      1 second ago
      First, stop Republicans from cutting taxes on the obscenely wealthy and adding them to the deficits. Then, repeal all the "Trickle Down" that Republicans have enacted for the last 40 years. Finally, enact a tax structure for the wealthy that has them paying a higher percentage of their total income in taxes than an average family that works for a living. They currently pay as little as one eighth as much. POOF! no deficits, and Social Security/Medicare are all set with plenty left over for programs that actually help the people of America, not just the wealthy. And for Republicans, who love to clutch their Bibles, this is even Biblical, Luke 12:48.

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins 2 месяца назад +9

      The best guarantee that SS will always be solvent is for Congress to never enact legislation that will kill jobs. That's where the funds come from. Congressmen's base salaries should the same as the average American worker, with bonuses for high wages, high employment, high GDP growth, and lower medical costs.

  • @roroneto
    @roroneto 2 месяца назад +31

    It is not the seniors collecting what the deserve, but the age working people abusing the system and living from American Tax payers. The system is corrupt and needs to be overhauled.

    • @lawrencesmith9059
      @lawrencesmith9059 Месяц назад

      The old people are the greediest generation imaginable, I'm one of them. We have destroyed the American dream and are handing our children a massive deficit. Shame on us. I try to tell everyone to stop voting for Democrats and fake Republicans that keep voting for more government spending, but noone listens to me.

    • @richardrussell1025
      @richardrussell1025 Месяц назад

      It would be interesting to see what amount actually goes to the retired.

    • @michaelbuxbaum
      @michaelbuxbaum 6 дней назад

      @@richardrussell1025 I can help you with that information. As reported on the Social Security website...
      ο Retired workers and their dependents accounted for 77.8% of total benefits paid in 2023.
      ο Disabled workers and their dependents accounted for 11.0% of total benefits paid in 2023.
      ο Survivors of deceased workers accounted for 11.2% of total benefits paid in 2023.

  • @jamescary6124
    @jamescary6124 2 месяца назад +13

    This man is crazy. Screw the younger people is his answer. Notice how big of a check he's going to get. Doesn't seem to care about the average worker. His average wage gains include the rich. Average worker did not recive that much of the wage gain.

    • @kannermw
      @kannermw 2 месяца назад +1

      One of the fastest increasing costs for seniors are medical costs that are a becoming an ever increasing percentage of total income. The rate of medical care cost increases is higher than either base inflation or wage rate. This guy is nuts if he thinks it won't affect seniors. It is essentially a cut

    • @kannermw
      @kannermw 2 месяца назад

      Younger people keep voting Demonrat. They think bigger government and deficit spending will make U.S. a wonderful fantasy land. Try hyperinflation, overpopulation from uncontrolled immigration, and increasing crime. The endless people from the third world cesspools are neither wonderful nor your friends. They will undercut your next job and bid up the price of everything else. But such humanity isn't so wonderful when you're not ready to compete.

    • @justkeepingitreal2024
      @justkeepingitreal2024 16 дней назад

      Somebody is going to get screwed. I would expect that SS benefits will be cut by 25%, the age to qualify for benefits will be raised to at least 70 years old and the people on disability benefits will be significantly reduced.

  • @user-ct9cc9tx6i
    @user-ct9cc9tx6i 3 месяца назад +301

    Problem is... Congress would never resist dipping into any surplus.

    • @glennmorrell4907
      @glennmorrell4907 3 месяца назад +16

      Exactly, over my lifetime (65 yrs) Congress has considered SS as their own little piggy bank, and they almost never replace what they took…

    • @rtquest22
      @rtquest22 3 месяца назад

      ​@@glennmorrell4907and it will never be replaced because the Fiat money has to be paid back to the Fed reserve plus interest.

    • @SabahPhilippines
      @SabahPhilippines 3 месяца назад +8

      AM A IMMIGRANT TOO BUT PLEASE MENTION ALSO IN YOUR NEXT SSS VIDEO ABOUT THIS ISSUE WHY ARE THE IMMIGRANT GRANDPARENTS ARE RECEIVING SSI WHICH THE GRANDPARENT NEVER AT ALL OPUT IN A SINGLE CENTAVOS ??? CAN YOU RESEARCH ON THAT SSI BENEFIT BEING RECEIVED BY IMMIGRANT GRANDPARENT WHICH NEVER WORK IN USA NEVER CONTRIBUTED IN USA SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEM .. I HOPE THEY GET RID OF SSI BENEFIT TO PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT ABLE TO CONTRIBUTE OR WORK IN THE USA.. SO WE CAN PROLONG THE SSS TRUST FUND .....

    • @brendawiener2630
      @brendawiener2630 3 месяца назад

      Biden will give it to ujraine

    • @ThatsMrPencilneck2U
      @ThatsMrPencilneck2U 3 месяца назад +1

      SS was never intended to run a surplus. That was a created as simple poor tax. When you borrow money at negligible interest rate, you're just taking it.

  • @adofoi30
    @adofoi30 3 месяца назад +264

    That is ok for people who are getting a lot of money. The average guy getting $1700 for the month would get crushed by getting $1400.

    • @Lolatyou332
      @Lolatyou332 3 месяца назад +12

      50k benefit is almost the max benefit you can receive as well.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 3 месяца назад +27

      Those people who are ‘getting a lot of money’ understood the purpose of SS and saved their money. The people who didn’t, either misunderstood or made poor choices.

    • @aulii11
      @aulii11 3 месяца назад

      @@toreckman8899 Or had to deal with situations that made saving a lot of money for retirement impossible.

    • @gups4963
      @gups4963 3 месяца назад

      @@toreckman8899 Or had the great time of getting MS when they were 15, but thanks jackass

    • @carrottop7802
      @carrottop7802 3 месяца назад +41

      Some of "those people getting a lot of money" worked a lot of hours, overtime, weekends, holidays, swing shift, more than one job, etc. to prepare for a comfortable retirement.

  • @psdaengr911
    @psdaengr911 Месяц назад +21

    Social Security benefits have been shrinking - REGARDLESS of which of those metric you use for inflation - for several decades.

    • @Yelocab1
      @Yelocab1 25 дней назад

      I've been on it since 2010 and it's gone UP every year based on the cost of living

    • @BrendaRock
      @BrendaRock 5 дней назад

      They don't use the REAL inflation numbers. They leave out petro, and housing probably food too.

  • @clarenceroller7897
    @clarenceroller7897 2 месяца назад +12

    You are the ONLY person that I have heard that has said wages have gone up more than inflation, so I don't know what information everyone is using. Also , when SS was last adjusted in the middle 80's 93% of wage were FICA taxable, now that number is around 83%, so if I was looking at some changes, that is where I would state looking!

    • @monicawallace-jn8tl
      @monicawallace-jn8tl 7 дней назад

      My wage income has actually gone down over the decades. In the same industry…. I use to make a decent living and now I have to use my retirement funds - such as SS - to supplement my very basic living expenses. And yes, even though I am collecting my SS, I still pay into it through FICA….

    • @BrendaRock
      @BrendaRock 5 дней назад +2

      I laugh when I hear wages are keeping up with inflation. I would like to know what job that is and how to get it. The ones making the least during their employable years will get the least and probably need it the most.

  • @johngill2853
    @johngill2853 3 месяца назад +316

    The last 3 administrations? Not Congress?
    Congress makes the laws, it's Congress that needs to act

    • @Markazoid6041
      @Markazoid6041 3 месяца назад +15

      You the president has very little to do with it. He can’t introduce bills, he can only give his recommendations. And your clip showed him saying to do just that. Do something to fix the problem

    • @paullampert6990
      @paullampert6990 3 месяца назад +9

      The POTUS Owns the conversation.

    • @johngill2853
      @johngill2853 3 месяца назад +7

      ​@@paullampert6990and there have been suggestions. Like Bush and privatization. Congress needs to act

    • @heltonja
      @heltonja 3 месяца назад +7

      If a President wants a bill introduced, there are always multiple congressmen or senators in his party that will introduce it, so that's just ridiculous​@Markazoid6041

    • @jerrynoc7128
      @jerrynoc7128 3 месяца назад

      This is fucked up. We know that a republican congress will cut benefits and a republican president will sign it. We know this. We do. This is a fact.

  • @MrRocky1959
    @MrRocky1959 3 месяца назад +107

    Nothing will correct the social security problem until the federal government stops the spending madness. I am not confident.

    • @katen1228
      @katen1228 2 месяца назад +4

      YES!!!

    • @priscillaross-fox9407
      @priscillaross-fox9407 2 месяца назад

      When you or if you ever learn just who is actually running this country you will understand better.

    • @DeadCat-42
      @DeadCat-42 2 месяца назад

      Reaganomics was a disaster and Bushes stupid wars costs trillions for nothing. The way is to realize that GenX is tiny, much smaller than the boomers and WWII generation they managed to pay for all by thier tiny baby bust generations back and it should be super easy to pay for. Demographics will fix SSI without any changes at all and anyone who says otherwise is just setting the stage to allow massive cuts.

    • @Nellis202
      @Nellis202 2 месяца назад

      And they never will 😢

    • @DeadCat-42
      @DeadCat-42 2 месяца назад

      Reaganomics was a disaster, Billionaires wanted tax cuts so they attacked our democratic institutions and created propaganda machines like Fox "news" to brainwash the masses into supporting an oligarchy.

  • @allthingsnm354
    @allthingsnm354 2 месяца назад +5

    DevinCarroll
    I think i speak for the majority watching. Where are you getting your data that shows U.S. wages are outpacing inflation?
    Are you taking average or median wage data etc?

  • @curtisbuchanan5884
    @curtisbuchanan5884 2 месяца назад

    Great information

  • @johnnyretires
    @johnnyretires 3 месяца назад +105

    If you are decreasing COLAs then you are cutting benefits.
    Back in the 1980s when the FRA was increased and SS started to be taxed- that was a cut.

    • @cceerr11
      @cceerr11 3 месяца назад +3

      I didn't think he was talking about decreasing COLA's (which only kick in after 62) as much as decreasing "wage indexing" for your previous earnings that make up AIME. That all occurs before age 60.

    • @transparentglazier
      @transparentglazier 2 месяца назад +5

      Also have the federal government end taxing SS benefits

    • @twan102000
      @twan102000 2 месяца назад +7

      @@cceerr11 A change in the computation is a cut to income benefit no matter how it is termed. The cap on wealthy contributions needs to be raised significantly or eliminated.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 2 месяца назад

      @@cceerr11 six of one…..

    • @billshepherd5777
      @billshepherd5777 2 месяца назад +3

      YEP, It should be tax free.

  • @johnsonpaul1914
    @johnsonpaul1914 3 месяца назад +271

    I don't know what your effing income is but after a lifetime of work, my wife and I (both 77) live on 25,000 a year social security and that is before $340 is taken out every month for medicare. You need to use reality numbers.

    • @carolynsmith3312
      @carolynsmith3312 3 месяца назад +23

      Well said!

    • @Toomanydays
      @Toomanydays 3 месяца назад +13

      Poor planing on your part. Why should that be my problem?

    • @johnsonpaul1914
      @johnsonpaul1914 3 месяца назад +54

      @@Toomanydays WTF? I was just stating a fact and that fact being that there are a helluva lot more people like us that the ones getting 70 grand a year from social security. I was not bitching. We had very few years making over 30,000. Everything is paid for, 4 kids thru college (and paid for). We are healthy and comfortable.

    • @red9man2130
      @red9man2130 3 месяца назад

      THis Man is an IMBECILE!!!!

    • @aulii11
      @aulii11 3 месяца назад +37

      @@Toomanydays Poor planning? Have you considered the possibility of unforeseen medical catastrophes? I mention this because it happened to my wife, and now we're living with the consequences. We both worked all our lives, but she was taken out of the workforce early due to the aforementioned medical problems.

  • @user-th7re3qv7w
    @user-th7re3qv7w 2 месяца назад

    Great idea

  • @rickbrunet2559
    @rickbrunet2559 Месяц назад

    Wow. Very well put. I will Def vote for you!

  • @FreddieVee
    @FreddieVee 2 месяца назад +89

    Mr. Carroll deserves an Oscar for being able to give that dissertation with a straight face.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 2 месяца назад +17

      He’s a hack.

    • @gretchen606
      @gretchen606 2 месяца назад +9

      This is exactly what Paul Ryan wanted to do! It is a huge benefit cut.

    • @jimison893
      @jimison893 2 месяца назад +5

      Try working and taking care of yourself rather than expect others

    • @bdunni88
      @bdunni88 Месяц назад +6

      A true win win for everyone.... Except the people who will get much less in the future.

    • @reensure
      @reensure Месяц назад +3

      I'm one minute in and hear, " ... if you want to know, subscribe to this channel ... " and now fear I may not last the entire 15 or so minutes of this just to confirm what I know.

  • @user-zy1us3js2m
    @user-zy1us3js2m 3 месяца назад +137

    Fixing Social Security is a great idea. We’ll have to wait and see what type of government we have after 20 Jan 2025. Social Security reform may be the least of our problems.

    • @Delimon007
      @Delimon007 3 месяца назад

      Whoever is in charge, not much will change. Did much change when bush was in charge? No. Obama? No. Trump? No. Biden? No. The politicians are the ones who control everything and they are all bribed, oops my bad, lobbied for by the same people. Don't hold your breath.

    • @youngyeller
      @youngyeller 3 месяца назад +20

      the migrants will get benefits and not have to do a thing.

    • @everettcalhoun8197
      @everettcalhoun8197 3 месяца назад

      @@youngyeller Try living like a migrant and your arrogant, lying tune would change in a hurry.

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад

      ​@youngyeller you need to do some research ss does not pay out any money to ANYONE who does not have 40 credits period, no matter what rumors you hear, it does not happen, the ss administration has reported that illegals have used stolen and fake ss numbers to get employment, but are unable to collect any benefits that they, or their employers have paid in, the ss administration has said illegals have actually paid more into ss then they will ever collect by a lot

    • @jpny4750
      @jpny4750 3 месяца назад

      @@youngyeller- Wasn’t it the migrants who actually built the US?

  • @robertoluis9238
    @robertoluis9238 2 месяца назад

    BRAVO...GREAT INFO---------------

  • @HelloThere-nz9ld
    @HelloThere-nz9ld 3 месяца назад +133

    The way government calculates inflation is not realistic. They calculate 3%, while the real inflation is 15%.

    • @brianjones7660
      @brianjones7660 3 месяца назад +5

      not even close.

    • @msimon6808
      @msimon6808 3 месяца назад +10

      @@brianjones7660 Yep. The Government calculation is not even close. In theory I should be living as well as I was before FJB 'Reduced Inflation'. I'm not.

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад +4

      @msimon6808 inflation is a global problem. At least we're doing better than most countries. If Trump was in charge inflation would still be a problem, and Ukraine would be in Russia, and Europe would be next.

    • @msimon6808
      @msimon6808 3 месяца назад

      @@Michael-Joseph123 Trump was very hard on Iran and delivered the first lethal aid to Ukraine. Obama sent band aids. Trump STRENGTHENED NATO - by making them spend the required amounts.
      Trump is pro-Ukraine. He wants more from Europe. He did the same for NATO. The Germans laughed at him. Currently the laughter has died down considerably (Germany is rearming). Senate MAGA Republicans are pro-Ukraine (according to a recent Scott, Cruz, Republican Senate Press Conference). They want a clean Ukraine Bill. Not an "open the border" Bill.
      MAGA 2024. Did you hear Chicago Blacks are stumping for Republicans/Trump? CHICAGO BLACKS !!! MAGA 2024.
      Inflation would be a smaller problem because there would be no 'Inflation REDUCTION Act" to increase inflation and he would not have restricted energy production for his green wet dreams. Or drained the strategic reserves.

    • @robertsmith2956
      @robertsmith2956 3 месяца назад

      obama changed it to hide how bad he was doing. Just like they changed the DOW in the stock market.

  • @toddhansen3468
    @toddhansen3468 3 месяца назад +94

    You seem to work for above average retirees many don't get a pension or have a 401 k

    • @robertsmith2956
      @robertsmith2956 3 месяца назад +3

      What they waste on air jorden tennis shoes they could have opened a 401k. I remember buying gold at $300 oz.
      Should have bought seer bolts at $25 back in the 80's. they sell for more than $22K now.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 2 месяца назад

      @@robertsmith2956 👏👏👏👏.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 2 месяца назад +3

      He works for anyone who will pay him. He’s a hack

    • @DeadCat-42
      @DeadCat-42 2 месяца назад

      This is what ignorance looks like..
      Modern "let them eat cake" idiot.

    • @jeannettesilva4242
      @jeannettesilva4242 2 месяца назад

      WHEN I STARTED WORKING, I HAD NO 401K AND NO PENCHIN, SO I STARTED A ROUTH IRA! AND I AM GLAD I DID! I WAS TOLED TO TREET PENCHINS AND SS LIKE IT WOULD NOT BE THERE! SO IF IT WAS IT WOULD BE LIKE THE GRAVER ON THE BICITE. NOT ALL I HAD. I WAS ALSO TOLED TO SET IT AND FORGET IT SET 15% IN THE SKTS AND NOT TO TUCHIT IT WAS NOT FOR ENEY ONE ELLS BUT ME! IT WAS NOT A SAVING ACOUT IT WAS JUST NOT THERE!

  • @dagovertozavala1915
    @dagovertozavala1915 2 месяца назад

    Great commentary

  • @user-th7re3qv7w
    @user-th7re3qv7w 2 месяца назад

    So glad I watched this

  • @estebanpagaza649
    @estebanpagaza649 3 месяца назад +131

    Yes stop giving money to other countrys

    • @ws775
      @ws775 3 месяца назад +7

      That has nothing to do with social security.

    • @Patrick-ih4oe
      @Patrick-ih4oe 3 месяца назад

      It could if applied to Social security.@@ws775

    • @MrGoodaches
      @MrGoodaches 3 месяца назад +4

      You would later be surprised at how much more expensive it becomes to live in and defend an isolated country.
      Yes there are some blunders with foreign policy and the associated spending. But overall, in the bigger picture, over many decades, foreign aid is less expensive than all that would happen without it.

    • @gups4963
      @gups4963 3 месяца назад +4

      @@MrGoodaches "is less expensive than all that would happen without it." Ukraine funding really saves us money??? Come on man

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад

      ​@@gups4963free would be taken at some point, you really think they will stop at Ukraine? You ever look at what's west of Ukraine, we have given more money than any other country, but together the European Union has given more when combined, but they are small compared to the US, but they would be next in line to be taken, and they are some of biggest customers when it comes to arms purchased from us.

  • @Toomanydays
    @Toomanydays 3 месяца назад +39

    The uncertainty of SS future probably has people taking SS early when they should wait. I’m in that crowd.

    • @ItsEverythingElse
      @ItsEverythingElse 3 месяца назад +2

      Doesn't really matter. People taking it early is actually good for the trust fund's balance.

    • @johnnyretires
      @johnnyretires 3 месяца назад

      Yes people have been taking SS early for DECADES because they think SSs future is uncertain. So.

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад +3

      That's what I've read, that 2 out of 3 people live past the break even point, and when they continue working part time to make ends meet, or so they are not taking as much out of their nest egg, they are still paying into ss and medicare. I see some argue they are taking it early just in case it is reduced in the future, which is a stupid reason, do you want 80% of your full benefit, or do you want 80% of your benifit that was already reduced by 30%😮​

    • @robertsmith2956
      @robertsmith2956 3 месяца назад +1

      I financial planner once remarked you can pay the money back, and get the higher amount still. So take it, invest it, and keep the money you make, and move up to the higher amount when you are old enough.

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад +1

      @robertsmith2956 you have to contact ss before you have been collecting for a year to stop collecting and pay it back.

  • @billjohnson6300
    @billjohnson6300 Месяц назад

    Hey Devin! You've got my vote for sure!!

  • @outsideview9052
    @outsideview9052 Месяц назад +1

    During my last 4-6 years of working, the wage increase didnt come close to the high inflation of prices. This was an interesting video.

  • @tomg6318
    @tomg6318 3 месяца назад +49

    How would all of this figure into a dictatorship?

    • @user-zy1us3js2m
      @user-zy1us3js2m 3 месяца назад +3

      I think we unfortunately all know the answer to your question.

    • @OroborusFMA
      @OroborusFMA 3 месяца назад

      Germany got the tragedy, America got the farce. For all their evil the Nazi Party had a jobs and highway program - the Republican Party just want to ban books and deny the country has a racist past.

    • @slickar2752
      @slickar2752 3 месяца назад +4

      Why do you ask? Are you moving to Cuba?

    • @karenbailey3034
      @karenbailey3034 2 месяца назад

      You mean Joe Biden’s dictatorship? It’s destroying the country!

    • @Mo4Honesty
      @Mo4Honesty 2 месяца назад +2

      We currently are. That's the only way to keep ignoring Congress or the Supreme Court when they tell you something or don't pass a bill you wanted. Just do it anyway.

  • @Joepacker
    @Joepacker 3 месяца назад +96

    The problem with this method is most Americans depend on SS as their only income in retirement, so yes they are getting a cut, try and sell that to people.

    • @Toomanydays
      @Toomanydays 3 месяца назад +1

      I don’t know anybody who thinks that.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 3 месяца назад +1

      Then ‘most Americans’ can’t read.

    • @Delimon007
      @Delimon007 3 месяца назад

      @@Toomanydays
      A lot of people do and rightfully so. The government decided to spend their money that they were stealing from them instead.

    • @lindawilluweit-joy4705
      @lindawilluweit-joy4705 3 месяца назад +3

      "They" have been talking for years about Social Security running out of money. People planning for their future today should be pretending they won't get any Soc. Sec. and plan accordingly. That's what we did and I'm in my 60's.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 3 месяца назад

      @@lindawilluweit-joy4705 👏👍.

  • @fishsniper1537
    @fishsniper1537 2 месяца назад

    What does price indexing include? Does it include price of food, housing or medical? The details are important, every little one of them.

  • @edwardpate6128
    @edwardpate6128 Месяц назад +3

    Hats off to you if you think you are going to live to 95, however that would be significantly defying the odds. While my financial planning is out to 90 I realistically expect to live to approx 80 based on my family history and overall health.

    • @bookmagicroe9553
      @bookmagicroe9553 Месяц назад

      Don't bet on it. My Dad thought he'd die by 80 based on his family history. He lived to 94. My mother, whose parents died in their 70s, is now 98.

  • @kburkes4245
    @kburkes4245 3 месяца назад +40

    The 90% of us who don't have over 1 million in retirement are highly dependent on SS. Any cuts or failure to keep up with inflation would be devastating. Seems to me that increasing the maximum taxable earnings subject to SS taxes (currently 168.6k) would help a lot.

    • @youdontwanttoknow5203
      @youdontwanttoknow5203 2 месяца назад

      We don't get to keep the COLA. They take it from us as soon as we get it via increases in Medicare premiums, cuts in food stamps, increases in rent, etc. The government takes it back. Don't you feel their hand in your other pockets when that COLA hits your account?

    • @jeannettesilva4242
      @jeannettesilva4242 2 месяца назад +2

      HOW OLD ARE YOU 401K AND ROUTH AND IRA HAVE EXISTER for 40 years! You don't get to tax us to tack Cear of you.

    • @jeansullivan3869
      @jeansullivan3869 2 месяца назад +4

      Certainly wouldn't help the self employed making over the cap. That's a 15.3 percent tax on every dollar over the cap, plus fed and state taxes. Easily over 50%. Why is the government allowed to keep more than half of what they earn?
      How about we increase the payroll tax by 2% on everyone? That would help more and be fairer.

    • @paperburn
      @paperburn 2 месяца назад

      @@jeansullivan3869 How about just raising the arbitrary cap to 400000 dollars, oh wait that would affect big business and wealthy donors only. can't marginalise the top 5 percent wage earners for the benefit of all 95 percent who made them money

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy 2 месяца назад

      @@jeannettesilva4242 And money grubbing employers who have a 401K to claim they have one to interviewees, but don't match or pay employee enough to put anything into one are plentiful.

  • @susanrushin7002
    @susanrushin7002 3 месяца назад +20

    Effectively a cut. Thumb down, and don’t run for office.

    • @febeleven
      @febeleven 3 месяца назад +2

      @susanrushin7002, Love your answer!

  • @stephenstone5700
    @stephenstone5700 2 месяца назад

    Devin, how would that change affect people at the very low end of social security on a monthly and a lifetime period?

  • @rc2437
    @rc2437 2 месяца назад +9

    My full retirement age is 67 years and 11 months. Yes, I'm a baby boomer. The most I'll draw from social security based on my current salary is $4,873 per month if I wait to retire until 70. Between full retirement age at 67 years and 11 months, I'm told that there is no limit to the $$$ I can make and not be penalized.

    • @Satjr35031
      @Satjr35031 2 месяца назад +2

      Your FRA is 67 years old.

    • @sammencia7945
      @sammencia7945 2 месяца назад +4

      It is either 66 8 or 10 months or 67.
      Born 1958 1959 or 1960 and later.

    • @Hugh_Manitee
      @Hugh_Manitee 2 месяца назад

      But you CAN WORK and make $22,360 a year in addition to your social security. My benefit is less than half of yours is, and I do quite well. I paid the house off just before retiring.

    • @Hugh_Manitee
      @Hugh_Manitee 2 месяца назад

      Must be Railroad retirement. Which is higher than S S.

    • @Satjr35031
      @Satjr35031 2 месяца назад

      @@Hugh_Manitee Once he reaches FRA he can make as much as he wants The $22K refers to people age 62-66 this year 66-67 he can make $59K with no penalty.

  • @anitaboddington4837
    @anitaboddington4837 3 месяца назад +7

    Wow, I don’t know where those numbers come from but let me tell you something. I am 70 years old. I’ve began collecting Social Security at age 65 and this is approximately what gets deposited into my bank account every month and Social Security is all I have to live on so look at this number $1250. That’s all folks.

  • @seriouslyyoujest1771
    @seriouslyyoujest1771 3 месяца назад +22

    Fortunately, I bought my first house in San Diego for $46,000 after the crash and 82. It’s our daughters home now with a detached granny flat. On the coast of Oregon,$107,000. Taxes, insurance $200 per month. Have room for your parents, living with parents, or retiree’s, demand Social Security’s Trust Fund is fixed, or make them think you’ll withhold your vote. A letter represents 10,000 votes. When your at the store, buy a post card, write FiX SOCIAL SECURITY on it. Now you’re a Lobbyist, and you didn’t even have to fly to Washington!

    • @robertsmith2956
      @robertsmith2956 3 месяца назад +2

      The only time I have even gotten contacted was when I said I was dropping by the DC office with my gun. Phone rang off the hook for a week on what a bad idea that is, dc is so safe...
      They rambled so long I never got the phone number before the message ran out. I came home from work and wife asked me what the hell I did this time LOL

    • @hubertvecht7255
      @hubertvecht7255 2 месяца назад +1

      What kind of babble is that? WTH are you trying to say ?

    • @kevindepew8193
      @kevindepew8193 2 месяца назад

      Is that a Stream of Consciousness. Seriously, I can't figure out what you are trying to say.

  • @brianblevins656
    @brianblevins656 Месяц назад +1

    Switching back to price inflation only carries the purported benefit if wage inflation continues to stay above price inflation. Otherwise, the change would be increasing benefits rather than curtailing them.
    Kudos for investigating longterm and incremental improvements.

  • @davejoseph5615
    @davejoseph5615 25 дней назад +1

    I am curious what you think could have been done thirty years ago to better plan for the projected shortfall. They saw it coming long, long ago.

  • @williammccaslin8527
    @williammccaslin8527 3 месяца назад +3

    Your not cynical, just spot on, kinda like your fix for the CP- E vs the CP- W, that no politicians want to hear. Thx for the vid Devin

  • @douglashook393
    @douglashook393 3 месяца назад +49

    From my peropective, it is fine for Devin Carrol and other high income earners. Perform the same calculations for low and medium income workers and you will see how it affects them. Not everybody makes $100,000 plus wages.

    • @BrendaRock
      @BrendaRock 3 месяца назад +1

      I NEVER got a huge raise like he's showing. I was always nickel and dimed to death. I wouldn't know what a 4% or 5% increase looked like. Inflation is outrageous and they have changed how it is calculated for SS purposes. They don't include heating oil, insurance and a slew of other items we've been blasted with. Now they want to give illegals SS and Medicare. Millions of them.

    • @Delimon007
      @Delimon007 3 месяца назад +4

      Forget everyone, the average american is only making about 40k a year after taxes right now. back in 2019 it was around 36kish meaning that's only a 10% or so wage growth. I don't need to tell you how bad inflation is and that growth is heavily shadowed by said inflation. . .

    • @johnnyretires
      @johnnyretires 3 месяца назад +5

      I’ll add in that making $100,000 a year is far from an affluent life.
      $60-80k in SS is nothing more that a comfortable life.

  • @Thisishard2333
    @Thisishard2333 2 месяца назад

    Wife and I just started collecting.We don’t need it, but taking it before it runs out.Opened a separate account just for direct deposit.Will be prepared just in case the well runs dry.

  • @williambeatty7781
    @williambeatty7781 3 месяца назад +41

    Why do you think you're going to live to 95 ?? The average man lives to approximately 82. Social Security is not paying out too much money to those that work.

    • @johngill2853
      @johngill2853 3 месяца назад +4

      They why are we having conversations about Social Security running short of money?

    • @karenbenning2166
      @karenbenning2166 3 месяца назад

      One of the reasons that SS is running out of money is that it covers people other than the worker who is paying in every week. @@johngill2853

    • @michael7054
      @michael7054 3 месяца назад +3

      The average retireee collects social security for way too long. It was only meant to live on for a few years until death. You have retirees living on this for years and Years and even decades.

    • @whatsup3270
      @whatsup3270 3 месяца назад

      @@michael7054 It is a 12 year plan, and it needs changed to a 14 year plan.

    • @everettcalhoun8197
      @everettcalhoun8197 3 месяца назад +1

      @@michael7054 20% of men never make it to 65.

  • @GuyzLikeMe
    @GuyzLikeMe 3 месяца назад +123

    The 400k payroll tax cap NEEDS to be raised so that the numerous U.S. millionaires pay more into the trust fund than a doctor or nurse or Walmart worker!

    • @heltonja
      @heltonja 3 месяца назад +22

      Why should they pay more if their benefit is caped.

    • @Lolatyou332
      @Lolatyou332 3 месяца назад +10

      @@heltonja uncap the benefit to that level. The system is all progressive anyway so they'll always make less than what they put into it.

    • @efnuti
      @efnuti 3 месяца назад +14

      From each according to his means, to each according to their needs? You are talking pure transfer of wealth. No thanks.

    • @heltonja
      @heltonja 3 месяца назад +10

      @Lolatyou332 I agree. If you are going to uncap contributions, then you should also uncap the benefit and use the same calculation that you do for everybody else.

    • @DevinCarroll
      @DevinCarroll  3 месяца назад +11

      @@heltonja And if it's done this way, it'll only solve 56% of the solvency issue. The fall out from employers and highly compensated employees having to pay the SS tax on all earnings would cause a myriad of problems.

  • @tenaguin1054
    @tenaguin1054 Месяц назад

    So, how would an annual cost of living increases be calculated, or does this eliminate them? We know that products and services will continue to rise each year.

  • @stevelong9328
    @stevelong9328 28 дней назад +1

    5.5 million divided by 28 years retired is 196k$ per year divided by 12 months is 16k$ per month, y'all had a good formula.

  • @jr.mcnemar7664
    @jr.mcnemar7664 3 месяца назад +8

    Well such a simple solution. You’re right why is this not being discussed? Frankly way too much drama in politics now a days. We all should call our representatives and let them know about this idea. Thanks Devin. Keep up the good work.

    • @SabahPhilippines
      @SabahPhilippines 3 месяца назад

      AM A IMMIGRANT TOO BUT PLEASE MENTION ALSO IN YOUR NEXT SSS VIDEO ABOUT THIS ISSUE WHY ARE THE LEGAL IMMIGRANT GRANDPARENTS ARE RECEIVING SSI WHICH THE GRANDPARENT NEVER AT ALL OPUT IN A SINGLE CENTAVOS ??? CAN YOU RESEARCH ON THAT SSI BENEFIT BEING RECEIVED BY IMMIGRANT GRANDPARENT WHICH NEVER WORK IN USA NEVER CONTRIBUTED IN USA SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEM .. I HOPE THEY GET RID OF SSI BENEFIT TO PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT ABLE TO CONTRIBUTE OR WORK IN THE USA.. SO WE CAN PROLONG THE SSS TRUST FUND .....

  • @robevans2114
    @robevans2114 3 месяца назад +18

    ???? a 14% decrease in yout planned benefit sounds like a cut which may make you need to work longer? Also, I thought we needed cash in 2032 and no future changes would keep the coffers filled in that year which is why immediate fixes like increased taxes were needed.

    • @mattkonowal5975
      @mattkonowal5975 2 месяца назад

      Buddy . The 14% decrease would happen to people like me. Not seniors currently collecting benefits. Please watch the video before making a comment with no substance.

  • @njlifeandhealth
    @njlifeandhealth Месяц назад

    Interesting insight! One of the biggest issues is so many budget discussions are delayed until the last minute to build press. There is a lot of political theatre that goes into these budget discussions and "fixing" things at the last minute.

  • @Ericbabacan
    @Ericbabacan 2 дня назад +3

    This video tackles the Social Security issue with a fresh perspective, offering a practical solution that sidesteps the typical contentious debates over taxes and benefits. It's great to see a well-thought-out plan that aims to secure the system's future without placing undue stress on anyone. Linking Social Security to smart investments could be the key to a sustainable and prosperous system for generations to come. Thanks for bringing this innovative idea to the forefront!

    • @HilaryPhan
      @HilaryPhan 2 дня назад +3

      I completely agree with this perspective! The idea of linking Social Security to strategic investments is a game-changer. It has the potential to generate consistent returns and ensure the longevity of the program without additional financial burdens on taxpayers or beneficiaries. It's high time we explore such innovative solutions

    • @KateEngdahl
      @KateEngdahl 2 дня назад +2

      Having an lnvestment adviser is the best way to go about the market right now, especially for near retirees, I've been in touch with a coach for awhile now mostly cause I lack the depth knowledge and mental fortitude to deal with these recurring market conditions, I nettd over $220K so far, that made it clear there's more to the market that we avg joes don't know

    • @A-krandy
      @A-krandy 2 дня назад +2

      Please can you leave the info of your lnvestment advsor here? I’m in dire need for one

    • @KateEngdahl
      @KateEngdahl 2 дня назад +2

      Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Marisa breton Dollard” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.

    • @A-krandy
      @A-krandy 2 дня назад +2

      Thanks for the tips......

  • @donwilson1307
    @donwilson1307 3 месяца назад +14

    When Social Security first came out there were 10 workers per retiree. Now it's around 4 workers per retiree. Also we are living longer on average. Something has to be done with spending or nothing will matter anyway. Good luck with changing anything in DC.

    • @slickar2752
      @slickar2752 3 месяца назад

      You’re correct on all but the living longer. American life expectancy has dropped by 2 years over the last few years.

    • @user-up6qp9fv9w
      @user-up6qp9fv9w 2 месяца назад

      ​@@slickar2752when social security first started the life span was around 62 years so people only collected for just a few years if they lived long enough. Now people are receiving social security for some people 20 years or longer. Depending how long you live you could get 2 to 3 times more then you put in. That is where the problem is our government never planned for that.

    • @shadowmancer99
      @shadowmancer99 2 месяца назад

      Its NOT just a spending issue, and where the spending IS an issue and could be reaslistically hit, it would hit areas you probably wouldnt want. Its going to take people the realization that the tax code AND the spending need changes, and yes that means more tax in some places, to some people. But its not an HONEST conversation if you dont have that as a tool in the toolbox.

    • @donwilson1307
      @donwilson1307 2 месяца назад

      The problem with taxation is it reduces money to the treasury. That's because people chage their financial habits when taxes go up. If businesses are taxed more, they will pass as much as they can to the consumer, causing a higher cost of living.

    • @shadowmancer99
      @shadowmancer99 2 месяца назад

      @@donwilson1307 That isnt borne out in the data, historically....yes some costs get passed on, but its not quite as dramatic as one makes it out nor is it the only factor. As for taxing individuals, there IS data that shows even very high mariginal rates for top earners wont change much...that said, I am NOT in the camp of insane tax levels. I AM saying that the only RATIONALE approach to actually fixing a bad fiscal sheet is to reduce spending and increase revenue. BOTH have to be on the table, and they have to be intelligently done.
      For instance making capital gains be normal income would simply make the system more fair....it shouldnt matter where you earn the money, it should be taxed at the same rate as everyone else, in whatever tax bracket your total monies put you in. Its a dumb loophole. And it only benefits really wealthy people. But I dont think the top rate should top more than 40%. So I keep saying that an all in approach with rationale limits, see what that does, and then we can consider more radical ideas. But doing nothing year over year is idiotic.

  • @Zotje
    @Zotje 3 месяца назад +13

    I don’t understand your calculation. You said you would receive 5.5 million over 28 years from ss. Dividing 5.5 million by (28yrs * 12m) gets me over $16k per month. Since $3800 is the max per person, I am confused on this number

    • @Satjr35031
      @Satjr35031 3 месяца назад +1

      I’m confused too. The max a couple at age 70 this year is $109,000. After twenty years with COLA maybe receive $2.3 million.

    • @DevinCarroll
      @DevinCarroll  3 месяца назад +3

      20 years away from filing + 28 years in retirement * 2.5% inflation + my benefit*50% payable to my wife

    • @whatsup3270
      @whatsup3270 3 месяца назад

      @@DevinCarroll Are you sure a 3% inflation was not loaded?

    • @whatsup3270
      @whatsup3270 3 месяца назад +1

      I think it was done by assuming 3% inflation for 20 years before filing and then drawing for 28 years with 3% inflation. Thus today's $68,796 ( max under those conditions ) will be $120,634 in 2042 and will be about $276,000 in 2070.

  • @richardkroll2269
    @richardkroll2269 25 дней назад +2

    I heard a story that there are over 2 million individuals over the age of 100 collecting Social Security. How about the SS Administration search those people out to insure the grandchildren aren't draining the bank account monthly after the SS check is deposited with grampa long since buried out on the back 40?

    • @tommyebay
      @tommyebay 23 дня назад

      Very good point!!!

  • @kentoler5396
    @kentoler5396 2 месяца назад +2

    How much did you pay into the program in 40 years of work?

    • @billshepherd5777
      @billshepherd5777 2 месяца назад

      I worked for 47 years. They said I paid it right about $100K And my employers paid in slightly more at $100K. If I live 25 years I should get about $603K But let's not forget the 22% they take back in taxes. STOP TAXING SOCIAL SECURITY😠😡🤬

  • @dicyeager
    @dicyeager 3 месяца назад +6

    During my first and only visit to the visit to the local SSA office in 2022, I estimated only one in twenty people in the waiting area were retirement age. If the program would have stuck with Roosevelt’s original goal, we wouldn’t be running out.

    • @DevinCarroll
      @DevinCarroll  3 месяца назад

      I agree. The program in 1940 took up less than .5% of the federal budget. Its over 20% today.

    • @richardnolan4763
      @richardnolan4763 3 месяца назад +1

      Social Security Administration has been administrating SSI welfare payments since 1974. Many people in the waiting area are on SSI welfare....SSI payments are part of the overall Federal Debt. SSI payments are NOT Social Security Payments. That said Federal welfare payments from SSI, SNAP(Food Stamps), Medicaid, TANF, LIHEA, HUD section 8, Free welfare cell phones & free welfare cell service, free welfare internet, blah, blah, blah......pump a lot of make believe inflationary dollars (Federal Debt) into the economy making your Social Security payments worth less (worthless?). BTW, Roosevelt's version of Social Security had no worries about running out of $$$ but it also had NO COLA's and NO MEDICARE...I doubt many Social Security recipients would appreciate NO COLA's and NO MEDICARE.

    • @kb1236
      @kb1236 2 месяца назад

      @@DevinCarrollit should be separate from the budget, in its own growth fund and paid from there so the politicians keep their hands off it. It is a separate fund on our paychecks and should not be considered a part of the Budget.

  • @waynecurtis8152
    @waynecurtis8152 3 месяца назад +22

    The problem is that they are adding people to get a check that has not paid in to the program. We that have been paying in needs to be taken care of

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад +2

      Not true, if you never paid into ss, and have 40 credits you can not collect ss.
      Edit, I did forget about minor children and spousal and survival benifits, but out of the 3, they could get rid of spousal benifits, why should someone collect benifits because their spouse paid into it.

    • @andhisband
      @andhisband 3 месяца назад

      @@Michael-Joseph123 Don't neglect SSDI.

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад +1

      @andhisband you can not collect ssdi if you never paid into ss, but you do not need to have 40 credits, if you never worked, then you could get ssi, which is not funded by ss taxes.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 2 месяца назад

      @@andhisband hear hear. That’s the problem. Fraudulent ssdi claims.

    • @toreckman8899
      @toreckman8899 2 месяца назад

      @@Michael-Joseph123 you are wrong.

  • @billb7636
    @billb7636 2 месяца назад +1

    Could you please just list the " two simple tweaks" that you are talking about? Maybe one is changing the index that is used to determine the yearly cost-of-living adjustment in Social Security, and which index are you suggesting should be used, but what is the other simple tweak?

  • @charlesbusch8739
    @charlesbusch8739 Месяц назад

    Pay social security taxes on all income? Including life insurance, tax exempt income, passive and investment income and reduce the rate?

  • @chrisvolk106
    @chrisvolk106 3 месяца назад +12

    Sounds like a benefit cut to me.

  • @michaeljames1962
    @michaeljames1962 3 месяца назад +5

    This was great information, Devon. Thank you for sharing this and I loved your sense of humor at the end of the video. It was awesome. You made me laugh a great deal. 😂😊

  • @johnsimms818
    @johnsimms818 2 месяца назад +1

    When SS was first eacted full retirement and life expectancy were both 65 .

  • @danielmorgan6779
    @danielmorgan6779 Месяц назад

    If the calculations actually included the things that folk’s use every day, every week, and every month I believe the price increases calculation would work, but with you’re proposed solution that would equate to a cut!

  • @martinnormand7458
    @martinnormand7458 3 месяца назад +24

    Social Security tax base was $35k in the late 80’s, and now it’s $168,600. Thats a big increase in Social Security revenue!

    • @MrGoodaches
      @MrGoodaches 3 месяца назад +5

      But that’s merely inflation difference.

    • @July.4.1776
      @July.4.1776 3 месяца назад +12

      I worked in the skilled trades back in the mid eighties it was possible to make that 35k by November or early December. No way I would make 168k now in 2024 at the same position.🤔

    • @Satjr35031
      @Satjr35031 3 месяца назад

      Tax base late eighties was around $45K

    • @MrGoodaches
      @MrGoodaches 3 месяца назад +4

      @@July.4.1776 And that's because wages have not kept up with inflation since the 80s. Throughout my 40+ year industrial career I took on progressive levels of management positions, earned college degrees and professional certifications. Nearing retirement the buying power of the salary from my respectably advanced career was only a little ahead of the buying power I earned as a Journeyman Tool & Die Maker with modest overtime in the 1980s.
      My talented colleagues who stayed in shops and factory floors building and maintaining the increasingly sophisticated tooling and machinery that makes industry run....they were being paid way less buying power nearing the end of their careers.
      This is NOT a comment on career choices. I'm providing a somewhat specific example of what occurred across most skilled and professional middle class occupations from 1980s through to 2020.

    • @martinnormand7458
      @martinnormand7458 3 месяца назад

      @@Satjr35031 thanks for the correction, you’re right.

  • @xlerb2286
    @xlerb2286 3 месяца назад +12

    Your example of your personal benefit going from $7243 under the current law to $6203 under the new law sounds like a cut to me. I'm not saying I'm against it, but call it what it is.

    • @xlerb2286
      @xlerb2286 Месяц назад

      Yes, and it's not a case of a reduced future raise not being a cut. The terms are spelled out, people are planning their retirement strategies around those terms. If you reduce that, it's a cut. Dress it up with all the folksy language you want but it's still a cut. And like you I'm not against a cut, I'm just against weasel wording it to say it isn't. Whenever you hear the phrase "a common sense approach" hang on to your pocket book and your rights because someone's coming for them.

  • @PopeDavidL
    @PopeDavidL 2 месяца назад

    There is also the "Cap". After a certain amount, wages are no longer taxed for Social Security. John Stewart showed a graph that indicated that that amount would cover the projected shortfall.

  • @BraddPaisley
    @BraddPaisley 2 месяца назад +14

    The 1% of rich people think of how to invest their money to increase their wealth during the recession. While 99% of struggling hard-luck people think of how to survive without food and daily necessities in the recession and the coming hyperinflation

    • @rodgertim2881
      @rodgertim2881 2 месяца назад

      Prioritizing effective personal finance management holds greater significance than the sheer amount saved, irrespective of income source. Consulting a certified financial advisor can offer tailored strategies to optimize financial results by reducing expenses and enhancing income, regardless of whether it's earned through employment or investments.

    • @paperburn
      @paperburn 2 месяца назад

      @@rodgertim2881 you have never dug a ditch or hammered a nail to earn a living

    • @RWZiggy
      @RWZiggy 2 месяца назад

      @@rodgertim2881 No, financial advisors mostly take more of people's money and leave them poorer than when they started. My brother needed some work while looking for a real job so he became one... meaning he called and badgered older people for investment programs, while knowing nothing of finances. What a farce though at least he kept his family housed and fed for a few months. You can read the horror stories of regular folk that even paid a "financial advisor" thousands over a few years to watch the "investments" tank.
      Instead, you can put money into index funds with proven track record with one of the huge companies that do that, whether the retirement type or not. And no I'm not going to recommend which ones, I'm not a #*($# scammer or financial advisor. Just saying it's been working for me for decades.

    • @branch_ranch
      @branch_ranch Месяц назад

      Which is why we should vote for people who prioritize worki ng families and not the top 1%.

  • @genuineconcern
    @genuineconcern 2 месяца назад +5

    Since mortgages were removed from inflation calculations in 1983 comparing the 1970' to now is misleading. Are rents still included in rhe calculations or were they removed @ 2009?
    The price inflation calculation also don't include volatile yet essential items like fuel, fruit and vegetables.

  • @johnmeyer655
    @johnmeyer655 3 месяца назад +4

    The plan you advocated was based on some numbers you provided but never sourced. Where did you pull your figures from?

  • @ron8566
    @ron8566 2 месяца назад

    Great points. Thank you for highlighting this.

  • @kirkmartin4787
    @kirkmartin4787 2 месяца назад +1

    The current method for calculating benefits is designed to hold the replacement percentage of a worker's wages constant across generations. Changing to price inflation would steadily lower the replacement percentage. So future generations would have less and less of their income replaced by Social Security in retirement. It's a benefit cut, but one that hits future workers much harder than current workers. If cutting benefits is the right approach, we should probably do it equitably.

  • @blkman1576
    @blkman1576 3 месяца назад +28

    I don't know where you get your figures from but I know that I worked for the post office starting in 1986 for$9.92 an hour. We got contract rises, cola's, and step increases that were superior to most jobs that are out there. I retired in January of 2017 at just under 60K a year. If I averaged 4.28% a year I would have been making
    over 75K(36.37 an hour). If I had stayed there till now I should have been making over 101K a year ($48.76 an hour). I know people that are still working there that started when I did and they are not no where near that kind of money even with the large cola's of the last few years. From what I could find on the internet the average wage has gone up less then 18% over the last forty years. The top wage for a level 6 clerk in the post office is 74K. That is a lot less than 4.28% a year. As far as living to 96? It must be nice to decide how long you will live but from what I can see only about 16% of men live that long.

    • @DanielCovington
      @DanielCovington 2 месяца назад +5

      This. The claim in the video that wages have outpaced inflation is complete BS. We all know better than that. Sure, you can measure things in such a way that you can make that claim, but reality is that it just isn't so.

    • @l.a.mottern3106
      @l.a.mottern3106 2 месяца назад

      Life expectancy overall after the CV19 Response is Less than before. This is playing Hob with all sorts of actuarial & insurance numbers :-|

    • @jeannettesilva4242
      @jeannettesilva4242 2 месяца назад

      MY GRANDFATHER RETERD BE FOR THAY CHANGED THE POST OFICCE PENCH HE ALSO RETER AS A POSTMAST NOT A WORKER! THE PENCHIN WAS DIFERINT THEN! THIS IS WAY YOU CAN'T COUT ON A PENCHIN OR SS. THAY WILL CHANG THE ARMY PENCH CHANGED TOO! IT USTO BE PAYED THE MOUNTH AFTER YOU GOT YOUR PAPPERS 20-25-30 NOW YOU DONT GET IT TILL YOU ARE 67! THIS IS WAY YOU NEED TO SAVE YOUR SELF ! I WAS IN THE ARMY!

    • @jeannettesilva4242
      @jeannettesilva4242 2 месяца назад

      MY GRAND PA WORK FOR THE USPS AND HE WAS A PAST MASTER He retread in 1975 HE MAD A LOT YOU! You Started 1986 You Have to Account for inflation, And I don't think when you left you had 36 years. HE DID! I Also don't think you had military time to. I KNOW HE HAD NICE PENCHIN TOO! I AM SAS FOR YOU THAT YOU DID NOT DO AS WLLAS HE DID BUT THAT IS THE WAY IT IS! IT TOOK BIT BUT TO EQULL 100.00 WHEN My GRANDPA WAS A Postmaster You Would Have to Make About 700.00 For Each Hindered. So, His Doller When Farther!

    • @darwinjina
      @darwinjina Месяц назад

      I'm told is that the cost-of-living increases are formulated for the senior's lifestyle.

  • @seriouslyyoujest1771
    @seriouslyyoujest1771 3 месяца назад +23

    They fixed it in 1982, and it will be fixed again. Politicians like their jobs.

    • @realMacMadame
      @realMacMadame 3 месяца назад

      Agreed. Letting SS fail would be political suicide.

    • @OroborusFMA
      @OroborusFMA 3 месяца назад

      What Reagan did in 1982 was tax a tax while dropping the top marginal tax rate for the very wealthy. What Reagan did in 1982 (and Bill Clinton did in the 1990s) was neoliberal anti-working class savagery.

    • @robertsmith2956
      @robertsmith2956 3 месяца назад +3

      it was NOT fixed. they doubled the tax, and then raised the benefit amount even higher. That made it WORSE.

  • @williammitchell3707
    @williammitchell3707 2 месяца назад

    Any reason we can't get rid of " GPO/WEP provision . Which is where my SS is cut by 60% because I have a government pension.

  • @mariadrukker2557
    @mariadrukker2557 2 месяца назад

    I've heard whispers about it. Supposedly, it tackles the challenges without the usual methods.

  • @gtcstorm40
    @gtcstorm40 3 месяца назад +10

    Terrible idea for people on tight budgets unless you guarantee the cut will be more than made up for by reductions in living costs. Good luck.

    • @Lolatyou332
      @Lolatyou332 3 месяца назад +1

      It's just a terrible idea. Don't think he even considered the negatives of it.
      CPI literally follows wages. The income from SS would basically be 1 year behind inflation forever, inflation comes from demand, when people get wage increases it increases demand for that year.. This approach is basically retroactive and may 'match' the rate of change of CPI, but it actually is compounding-ly making SS have less and less buying power.
      Took me literally 2 minutes to decipher what he was saying to see how bad of an idea it is.

    • @cceerr11
      @cceerr11 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Lolatyou332 You do realize he was talking about changing the "wage indexing" that is applied to your 35 years of wages and takes place before age 60, right? Has nothing to do with when you are collecting SS.

  • @paulstein916
    @paulstein916 3 месяца назад +6

    Solving the social security issue is a simple actuarial fix with many combinations of levers to pull. The problem is that there is no consensus nor desire to fix it until we get down to the 11th hour like it was done in the 1980’s. The much bigger problem is Medicare and Medicaid. That’s what retirees should be worried about, not social security.

    • @jjdelamo6246
      @jjdelamo6246 2 месяца назад

      One way to save Soc Sec is to increase wage tax to 50%, increase full retirement age to 99 and increase early retirement age to 89. Simple, but it will work for sure...

  • @edwardwenzel1434
    @edwardwenzel1434 2 месяца назад

    Why not change the maximum contribution amount also?

  • @JuanMartinez-kn2qs
    @JuanMartinez-kn2qs 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for the update.

  • @slshock
    @slshock 3 месяца назад +25

    The biggest problem is people receiving benefits that have not paid into the system.

    • @headlibrarian1996
      @headlibrarian1996 3 месяца назад +2

      Like spouses. Getting a free 50% increase in your SS benefits, without paying more tax, just because you’re married, on top of the vastly more generous income tax brackets you get, is outrageous.

    • @Savannah-ed4rv
      @Savannah-ed4rv 3 месяца назад

      ​@@headlibrarian1996that's because, number one women didn't work outside the home on Social Security was established and most of the elderly being impoverished were female widows. Another reason is to encourage people to be married because marriage is create a stable society! Young people nowadays don't realize that when you have people living together and having children together without being married it's a very unstable situation.

    • @Savannah-ed4rv
      @Savannah-ed4rv 3 месяца назад

      The only people who get benefits who haven't paid into the system are children of people who have passed away, and spouses. No one who comes here legally or illegally who has not paid into the system can get Social Security retirement benefits there are other programs like SSI that people can get and I personally don't agree with that.

    • @headlibrarian1996
      @headlibrarian1996 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Savannah-ed4rv Then give spouses who paid little or nothing in tax a survivor’s benefit and nothing else. Solves the widow problem, if it is a problem, and saves the system a heck of a lot of money, while not unduly enriching the payer.

    • @slshock
      @slshock 2 месяца назад

      I know of people getting disability benefits every month that have not paid into the system in the last 30 years.
      @@Savannah-ed4rv

  • @richardhay645
    @richardhay645 3 месяца назад +38

    Stupid idea. If you receive less that is a cut.

    • @johngill2853
      @johngill2853 3 месяца назад +3

      Your idea(that everyone will agree with)

    • @Columbus1152
      @Columbus1152 3 месяца назад +5

      What Devin is saying is it's less of an increase, but you are assured of an increase. So, how is getting an increase like a cut? You're using government speak, if taxes go up less this year that's a tax cut?

    • @thomasd5488
      @thomasd5488 3 месяца назад +4

      You would not get a cut in current payments. Only in Washington, D.C. do they consider a smaller INCREASE, a cut.

    • @richardhay645
      @richardhay645 3 месяца назад +4

      @thomasd5488 Definitely a cut. Future benefits would be CUT.
      It's simply a matter of who gets cut

    • @johngill2853
      @johngill2853 3 месяца назад +3

      @@richardhay645 which is why social security hasn't been fixed yet. Who pays for it? Politicians do not like mad voters

  • @briansauter9206
    @briansauter9206 2 месяца назад

    How about if you never pay into SSI you cannot collect it

  • @darlenehughes6836
    @darlenehughes6836 2 месяца назад

    Yeah right!!

  • @tlbx57
    @tlbx57 3 месяца назад +5

    Want to solve SS long term, teach our children effective investing and cash flow principals. They will be far less likely to be dependent on SS when they retire.

  • @martinfromseacity2010
    @martinfromseacity2010 3 месяца назад +16

    Interesting thanks, I'm 72 and retired, been following you for years. I waited till 67+4 to take SS. That helped my spendable income in retirement. I also accelerated my mortgage payoff which saved 1200$/month in expense. I paid the mortgage off with life insurance proceeds. Best move I've made for financial security. Now I;m worried about the massive debt the politicians are stacking on us, will the SS last through a currency and debt reset?

    • @OroborusFMA
      @OroborusFMA 3 месяца назад +2

      67+4 would be 71 . . . you have to claim at 70, there are no advantages to waiting longer.

    • @Michael-Joseph123
      @Michael-Joseph123 3 месяца назад +5

      @@OroborusFMA I think he was saying 67 years and 4 months.

  • @behamiltonsrful
    @behamiltonsrful 2 месяца назад

    How IS Social Security handled? What happens with it when they take it out, are they investing our money, or placing it into a fund that makes money or interest? OR, are they just using to to borrow against?

    • @edrodgers4581
      @edrodgers4581 2 месяца назад

      The money that is paid in SS taxes is not invested. It is paid out to current recipients. Your Federal welfare check today is bring funded by the taxes young people pay.

    • @behamiltonsrful
      @behamiltonsrful 2 месяца назад

      @@edrodgers4581 Do not take this wrong, I am asking the creator. He seems to be the expert. I know I am not, that is why I am asking.

  • @pjdelucala
    @pjdelucala Месяц назад +2

    Replace the payroll tax with a national sales tax. It would provide a larger tax base and need a much lower tax rate.
    Peter de Luca: Economist

    • @cmdrfunk
      @cmdrfunk Месяц назад

      Now that people are retired and done paying high levels of income tax you want to shift from income tax to sales tax so you're highly taxing retirees again.

  • @joemills3410
    @joemills3410 3 месяца назад +19

    Invest 25% of the trust fund in the SP 500 instead of all of it invested in Treasuries and no more borrowing against SS for the general fund. There, I fixed it. What's next?

    • @ws775
      @ws775 3 месяца назад +4

      There is nothing left to borrow. They borrowed it all

  • @katydid2877
    @katydid2877 3 месяца назад +27

    I’ve been hearing the “other guy” is going to end social security and Medicare for 50 years.

    • @mariekrolly5249
      @mariekrolly5249 2 месяца назад

      MEDICARE IS OBUMER 💩SHIT CARE STEALING U SS TO PAY IT !

    • @buyerbware25
      @buyerbware25 2 месяца назад

      Maybe that is because it was years ago that Quid Pro Joe said on TV that he would be willing to cut Social Security "if it would balance the budget."

  • @rebacarmack8335
    @rebacarmack8335 2 месяца назад

    I’d vote for you!

  • @GermanTree874
    @GermanTree874 2 месяца назад

    I was thinking "Carroll for President" about 2 minutes in the video prior to the point where you put it.

  • @austinburns4213
    @austinburns4213 3 месяца назад +7

    This SS change very proposal is already in the platform of the No-Labels party. However, they also want to eliminate the capital gains tax break, so that would be a serious issue for retirees.

    • @johnnyretires
      @johnnyretires 3 месяца назад +1

      I don’t really favor a separate capital gains tax . But that’s another topic.

    • @Summerdee223
      @Summerdee223 3 месяца назад +2

      I really, really hope they don't mess with capital gains. That would be a nightmare for so many people!!

    • @Delimon007
      @Delimon007 3 месяца назад +4

      I dislike capital gains taxes in general. Why should I be taxed AGAIN just because I made a bit of money? The money I used was already taxed 2-3 times before I even got it. So now I get taxed again?!?!?

  • @samuledarconi2927
    @samuledarconi2927 25 дней назад

    Devin is full of it on this one.

  • @kathytincler2446
    @kathytincler2446 2 месяца назад

    Why is it that every other year or so we don't get the 'COLA'?

  • @shermanscott383
    @shermanscott383 3 месяца назад +4

    Hold it. Instead of quickly scrolling the wage and price inflation over the years, compare those numbers to benefit increases over the same years.

    • @DevinCarroll
      @DevinCarroll  3 месяца назад

      The price inflation (right side) are the benefit increases.

  • @pensacola321
    @pensacola321 3 месяца назад +45

    Devin's suggestion might indeed help save social Security but it will be on the back of the poor, not the wealthy.

    • @moneymanfernando1594
      @moneymanfernando1594 3 месяца назад +1

      Agree !!

    • @AllergicToMakeBelieve
      @AllergicToMakeBelieve 3 месяца назад +8

      That's because he makes his income helping the wealthy, poor people don't have financial advisors

    • @robp9746
      @robp9746 3 месяца назад +4

      The Republican way.

    • @wa210
      @wa210 3 месяца назад

      Devin's chart showing average wage gains of I think he posts 4.89% or so, is way off mark. At least for me. I worked for a airline, and when our contract came up for renewal every 4 years, airline management always only raised hourly pay 2% per year. Our Union and us the actual workers had to fight hard for anything and everything. The CEO and his cronies never had to fight for raises or bennies. The hand picked board, always gave them huge raises and even more bennies, especially stock options. The biggest scam in corporate America are stock options IMO. That's where the real money is for the top, and selling ISO stock is how to avoid social security taxes. Curious what Devin thinks about that?

    • @rickarmstrong3944
      @rickarmstrong3944 3 месяца назад +3

      Isn't that the way of most republican solutions?