Human Resource & Payroll Services And Solutions - Houston, Dallas, Austin - Texas www.hrp.net. Ten Things You Might Not Have Known About Social Security. Here's a list of 10 fast facts about Social Security.
2. 1 Social Security benefits are paid to about 57 million people. Most (40
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million) are retirees and their families. The rest are workers who
become disabled and families in which a parent or spouse dies.
2 About 161 million people work and pay Social Security taxes today.
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3. 3 Social Security replaces about 40 percent of an average wage earner's
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income after retiring, and most financial advisers say retirees will need
70 percent or more of pre-retirement earnings to live comfortably. This
money must come from retirement plans, pensions and other savings.
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4. 4 Money paid in taxes is not held in personal accounts for individuals to
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use when they get benefits. Your taxes are being used now to pay
people who are getting benefits today.
5 You pay Social Security taxes on your earnings up to a certain amount.
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The amount for 2013 is $113,700.
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5. 6 When you work, 85 cents of every Social Security tax dollar paid goes
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to a trust fund that makes payments to current retirees and their
families and to surviving spouses and children of workers who died.
The other 15 cents goes to a trust fund that pays benefits to people
with disabilities and their families, as well as covers the costs of
managing the Social Security programs.
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6. 7 Workers earn Social Security "credits." In 2013, you earn one credit for
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each $1,160 in earnings -- up to a maximum of four credits per year.
(This amount usually goes up every year.)
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7. 8 Most people need 40 credits (10 years of work) to qualify for benefits.
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Younger people need fewer credits to be eligible for disability benefits
or for family members to be eligible for survivors' benefits when the
worker dies.
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8. 9 Social Security benefits replace a percentage of earnings when you
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retire, become disabled or die. Benefits are based on how much you
earned during your career. Higher benefits are paid to those with
higher lifetime earnings.
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9. 10 Your payments also depend on whenyou retire. If you wait until you
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reach your "full retirement age," you will receive more than if you
start receiving payments after retiring earlier. If you delay receiving
benefits until after your full retirement age, your payments will be
increased by a certain percentage, depending on the year you were
born.
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