Baltimore Sun

There’s 500 reasons to remove income cap for Social Security taxes

- By Teresa Ghilarducc­i

In the first few days of 2023, at least 500 U.S. workers will likely have already paid their Social Security taxes for the year.

That’s because in just a day they earn the maximum amount of income subject to Social Security tax, or $160,200. Those are just executives at public companies where salaries are disclosed, such as Apple Inc. CEO Tim Cook, who earned $98 million in 2021, and Intel Corp. CEO Patrick Gelsinger, who took home more than $177 million. (Their salaries for 2022 have yet to be disclosed, but it’s safe to assume that once again they will hit the tax cap immediatel­y.) Scores more executives at private companies fall into the same category.

To help pay for Social Security, a tax of 12.4% is split between employees and employers; a worker is subject to a 6.2% tax assessed on earnings up to a certain amount — $160,200 in 2023. Over the past four decades, Social Security’s taxable wage base has shrunk because workers are paid more in non-taxed benefits, such as health insurance. In addition, people earning high wages have received bigger raises than the bottom 95% of earners.

No surprise, Social Security will only be able to pay 76% of promised benefits by 2033 if nothing changes. The payroll tax would have to increase by 3.47 percentage points from the current 12.4% to be able to guarantee promised benefits for the next 75 years.

But raising the payroll tax rate on existing workers is near-impossible politicall­y. An easier solution would be to eliminate the earnings cap while leaving benefits as is. The extra revenue would solve the financial gap for 35 years, according to a report by the Congressio­nal Research Service.

About 180 million Americans contribute­d a total of $943 billion to Social Security in 2021. Ending the cap for the 5% of U.S. workers who earn more than $160,200 would increase revenue by more than $150 billion.

Rep. John Larson, D-Conn., has offered a plan to save Social Security that would raise the earnings cap but still provide some relief to workers earning below $450,000.

For those concerned that making any changes to Social Security is too difficult, it’s been done before. In 1994, a bipartisan group of lawmakers eliminated the income cap that used to exist for taxes paid by workers to fund Medicare.

Almost everyone agrees Social Security is vital. Nearly two-thirds of beneficiar­ies age 65 and older receive 50% or more of their total income from monthly Social Security checks. For one-third of elderly beneficiar­ies, Social Security provides 90% or more of their income. Studies show the majority of Americans want more revenue for Social Security. The quickest way to get it might just be to ask at least those 500-some-odd well-compensate­d executives to pay more.

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