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Social Security has two other funding sources: benefit taxes on some seniors and interest income earned on money in the program's trust funds. But both of those are in danger right now. The ...
Social Security does have a trust fund, which is on track to run out of money in around 2035. That's not great news, of course, but it also does not mean that Social Security is going to disappear ...
The combined trust funds supporting the Social Security retirement and disability programs are expected to run out of money as soon as 2035. But, despite that fact, there's actually very little ...
The trust funds are running out, but it's not all bad news The trust funds were not designed to be major sources of income for Social Security, so this model isn't sustainable for the long term ...
Section 201 of the Social Security Act requires that the money in the trust funds be invested in interest-bearing debt securities issued and guaranteed by the federal government known as U.S ...
As the headlines say, Social Security's trust funds are expected to run out of money in 2035, based on the intermediate assumptions. If the high-cost assumptions prove accurate, the projected out ...
No, Social Security Won’t Run Out of Money. Even when the OASI fund is depleted, “payments would not stop completely,” Orman wrote. The worst-case scenario is that earned benefits would need ...
Social Security is spending more money than it is taking in, and these deficits are only expected to get worse over time, until the program completely runs out of money in about a decade. If you ...