snowman45106
Member
Here is something interesting. I was just looking at what I have paid into social security over the past58 years and it adds up to about 700,000 dollars so why am I only getting 1287 per month. Who do I sue for the rest.
Just live for at least 45+ years after you start collecting and you'll be even. Easy peasy!Here is something interesting. I was just looking at what I have paid into social security over the past58 years and it adds up to about 700,000 dollars so why am I only getting 1287 per month. Who do I sue for the rest.
Why ever told you you would get back what you paid in? Nobody, that’s who.Here is something interesting. I was just looking at what I have paid into social security over the past58 years and it adds up to about 700,000 dollars so why am I only getting 1287 per month. Who do I sue for the rest.
I think that perhaps you are misunderstanding something, somewhere.Here is something interesting. I was just looking at what I have paid into social security over the past58 years and it adds up to about 700,000 dollars so why am I only getting 1287 per month. Who do I sue for the rest.
Are you sure that the 700,000 wasn't your earnings total and not your contribution?Here is something interesting. I was just looking at what I have paid into social security over the past58 years and it adds up to about 700,000 dollars so why am I only getting 1287 per month. Who do I sue for the rest.
The report you get from Social Security periodically does not tell you what you (and your employer) paid in FICA taxes over the years. It instead tells you what your earnings were. Your Social Security beenfits are not based at all on the taxes you paid. It is not like modern defined contribution pension plans that pay out based on what you invested into the pension plan. Social Security is based on what you earned. So it is likely that it is your earnings you are looking at; your actual tax payments would have been much less. And the amounts you get in benefits are defined by statute. Thus, even if you think the benefits are too low relative to what you paid in, you have nothing for which sue based on that. Congress sets the benefit levels, and those benefit amounts are in no way tied to the taxes you and your employer paid into the system.Here is something interesting. I was just looking at what I have paid into social security over the past58 years and it adds up to about 700,000 dollars so why am I only getting 1287 per month. Who do I sue for the rest.
An excellent example of how the Social Security changes over the years have benefitted previous generations; unfortunately with the baby boomers and subsequent generations they'll see much less benefit from the taxes they paid. I'm not at all confident I'll even get back what I and my employers paid into Social Security when I retire. The system is headed for a break down starting in less than 20 years (i.e. before I retire) unless Congress steps in to fix it, something that so far it has shown zero interest in doing.Are you sure that the 700,000 wasn't your earnings total and not your contribution?
I figured mine out. In 40 years I contributed $57,000 and in 2008 when I started collecting I got 1367 per month.
I can almost guarantee that your 1287 per month is not based on 700,000.
By the way, at the end of 2018 I will have collected almost $167,000. Not bad for a $57,000 investment and I'm only 72.
Like Congress always does, it's going to have to fix it at about 1 minute before midnight on the Social Security Doomsday Clock.The system is headed for a break down starting in less than 20 years (i.e. before I retire) unless Congress steps in to fix it, something that so far it has shown zero interest in doing.
The longer Congress waits to fix it, if it ever does (and I'm not totally confident it will ever do it) the worse the fix will have to be to correct the shortfall in the system. That fix is most likely to benefit existing recipients over those of us who have yet to retire. I think baby boomers and later generations are likely to get the short end of the stick on this.Like Congress always does, it's going to have to fix it at about 1 minute before midnight on the Social Security Doomsday Clock.