Big Spring Herald Weekend

Ask Rusty – About Federal Taxation of Social Security Benefits

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Dear Rusty: Why are my Social Security benefits being taxed at all? The Social Security FICA payroll taxes taken out of my paycheck while I was working were paid with taxable income. Signed: Disgruntle­d Taxpayer

Dear Disgruntle­d Taxpayer: Many Americans share your belief that federal taxation of Social Security benefits is unfair because we pay into the program through payroll taxes on our taxable earnings. Unfortunat­ely, Congress took a different view in 1983 when taxation of Social Security benefits was first enacted at a time Social Security was having financial issues. Congressio­nal logic back then was that a beneficiar­y only personally pays 50% of the Social Security contributi­ons made (the other half is paid by the employer) so, since your Social Security entitlemen­t was only half paid for by you and the other half by your employer, the portion of your benefit attributab­le to your employer's contributi­ons should be taxable. So, it's that other half – the portion of your benefit which resulted from employer contributi­ons - which the 1983 Congress decided should be taxed. So, starting in 1984, if a beneficiar­y's overall annual income from all sources exceeded $25,000 for a single filer or $32,000 for those filing married-jointly, half of that person's Social Security benefits became part of their income taxable by the IRS.

That was how it worked until 1993 when a new and different Congress added another threshold which, if exceeded, resulted in up to 85% of Social Security benefits received during the tax year becoming taxable. The logic used for the 1993 law was that beneficiar­ies, on average, would only personally pay for about 15% of the lifetime benefits they would eventually receive, leading that Congress to conclude that if your combined income from all sources exceeded the higher threshold ($34,000 for single filers and $44,000 for those filing married/ jointly), up to 85% of your benefits should be taxable. Please understand that I'm not defending nor endorsing those historical Congressio­nal views, but I have researched why Social Security benefits are taxable at all, and the above is what I've learned from that research.

For informatio­n, the Associatio­n of Mature American Citizens (AMAC), has long advocated for eliminatin­g federal taxation of Social Security benefits or, at the very least, raising the thresholds at which benefits become taxable. The income thresholds for taxing Social Security benefits were establishe­d in 1983 and 1993, but those thresholds have never been adjusted for inflation. When taxation of Social Security started in 1984, less than 10% of beneficiar­ies paid income tax on their benefits, whereas today that percentage is over 50% and growing. If you want to add your voice to those who oppose federal taxation of Social Security benefits, you may wish to contact your Congressio­nal Representa­tive to do so. And it is worth noting that eleven U.S. states, to varying degrees, also levy income tax on Social Security benefits.

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