San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Social Security will not be going away

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Dear Liz: You have addressed Social Security in your column recently and detailed the benefits to waiting until age 70 to take payments. I read that Social Security funds are expected to run out around 2035. At that time I’ll be 76 and would only get six years of benefits versus 13 years if I start at age 62. Do you still think it is wise to wait on benefits as Social Security may go away?

Answer: Social Security isn’t going anywhere. What’s being depleted is its trust fund, which is used to supplement the taxes Social Security collects to pay benefits. This trust fund is scheduled to be out of money in 2031, according to a new Congressio­nal Budget Office estimate that takes into account the effects of the pandemic. Even if the fund is depleted, however, the system will still collect enough in taxes to pay 76 percent of promised benefits.

So benefits won’t stop, and it’s highly unlikely Congress would allow benefits to be cut for retirees and near retirees. Social Security is a hugely popular program, and such cuts would be politicall­y unpopular, to say the least, which is why most experts predict that lawmakers will fix the system before that happens.

If you allow yourself to be panicked into starting benefits early, on the other hand, you’re permanentl­y reducing your benefit by 30 percent.

If you’re the higher earner and you’re married, you’d also be locking in a lower survivor benefit. A lower Social Security benefit can have a huge impact on your standard of living in retirement, so make sure you understand the facts about the system before making a decision you may live to regret.

Weston is a certified financial planner. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604. Distribute­d by No More Red Inc.

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