As moderate 
inflation has made a comeback, the federal government has decided to boost 
Social Security benefits by 3.6% for 2012. This means an average increase of $39 
per month for 55 million Social Security recipients ($467 for all of 2012). 
Also, more than 8 million Americans who get Supplemental Security Income will 
get $18 more per month ($216 for 2012).1
There are two things to note in the fine print. 
·         A COLA increase in Social Security means that Medicare premiums can also 
increase. Much of the 2012 COLA adjustment could effectively be eaten up this 
way, as Medicare premiums are automatically deducted from Social Security 
checks. (2012 Medicare Part B premiums should be announced before the end of 
October.)1,2 
·         Businesses should note that the Social Security wage base will rise to 
$110,100 for 2012. Currently, the federal government levies payroll tax on the 
first $106,800 of income; next year, that ceiling rises by $3,300. This means 
about 10 million more high-earning Americans will be subject to the payroll tax, 
which could vary anywhere from 3.1% to 6.2% in 2012 depending on legislative 
action (or inaction).1,2
How might Social Security address its long-term shortfall? Proposals abound, from simple fixes to radical reforms.
·         President Obama’s 
fiscal commission has suggested raising the FICA cap. In this proposal, the 
payroll tax cap would gradually increase between now and 2050 so that 90% of 
wages earned in America would be subject to Social Security tax by the middle of 
the century. (This is how it used to be.) Under this plan, the taxable maximum 
would be $190,000 by 2020.2
·         Rep. Paul Ryan 
(R-WI), Chair of the House Budget Committee, has authored the GOP’s “Path to
Prosperity” plan, the so-called “Ryan roadmap” that would encourage workers 
under age 55 to direct some of their payroll taxes into personal retirement 
accounts. Rep. Ryan’s proposal would also index initial Social Security benefits 
for most retirees to price growth instead of average wage growth and set the age 
for Social Security eligibility at 
67.3,4,5
·         The conservative Heritage Foundation suggests a 5-year strategy in its 
Saving the American Dream proposal, which calls a reduction in Social Security 
benefits for the richest 9% of retirees, a $10,000 tax exemption for all who 
work past the federal retirement age, and the near-term elimination of taxation 
of Social Security income.6
·         Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain has proposed replacing 
Social Security with the “Chilean model”. In the early 1980s, Chile’s government 
ended its retirement entitlement program and put retirement planning solely in 
the hands of individuals, who maintain personal retirement investment accounts 
and set their own contribution levels and retirement dates. Investor’s Business Daily notes that on 
average, the program has yielded better than 9.2% compounded annual returns over 
30 years.7
·         Twelve fixes were suggested in a 2010 report issued by the U.S. Senate 
Special Committee on Aging, among them:
o   A 3% cut in benefits
o   Taking the payroll tax to 7.3%
o   Hiking the full retirement age to 68 or 
older
o   Increasing the Social Security averaging period that determines 
SSI
o   Reducing the typical yearly COLA by 1% or 
.5%
o   Reducing spousal benefits
o   Investing some of Social Security’s trust funds in 
equities
o   Directing some estate tax revenues into Social Security’s trust 
fund
How much 
retirement income do you have these days? With Social 
Security’s future still a question mark, you may be thinking about where your 
retirement income will come from in the years ahead. A chat with the financial 
professional you know and trust may be worthwhile before 2012 
arrives.
This material was prepared by MarketingLibrary.Net Inc., and 
does not necessarily represent the views of the presenting party, nor their 
affiliates. 
Citations.
1 
- businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9QFGU602.htm [10/19/11]         
2 
- money.cnn.com/2011/10/19/pf/taxes/social_security_tax/ [10/19/11]                
3 
- 
montoyaregistry.com/Financial-Market.aspx?financial-market=will-you-have-an-adequate-retirement-cash-flow&category=3 
[10/21/11]   
4 
- 
articles.cnn.com/2011-09-26/politics/politics_gop-paul-ryan_1_ryan-plan-paul-ryan-government-spending/3?_s=PM:POLITICS 
[9/26/11]
5 
- cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3308 [10/21/10]              
6 
- savingthedream.org/how-it-affects-you/retirees/ [10/21/11]  
7 
- 
investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article/586464/201109291833/Cains-Chilean-Model.htm 
[10/12/11]            
8 
- 
money.usnews.com/money/blogs/planning-to-retire/2010/05/18/12-ways-to-fix-social-security 
[5/18/10]   
8 
- 
money.usnews.com/money/blogs/planning-to-retire/2010/05/18/12-ways-to-fix-social-security 
[5/18/10]   
 
 
 
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