bugwar
Emperor
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2012
- Messages
- 1,246
Customer: I'd like to withdraw 50$ from my savings account please.
Banker: Ok, let's just check here.... Oh, I'm sorry - you'll just have to get by with 25$ instead. We've reduced our expenditures, you see.
Customer: Umm, that's not how this works. I've been making deposits out of every paycheck. I signed this contract here that shows that in exchange for me letting you have temporary use of my money, you will keep it safe for me until the day I want to withdraw it.
Banker: Yes, of course - but now kids are in charge of things, and they don't like the promises their parents made. So screw you.
Interesting story you tell there. Let me tell one of my own:
According to the institutes data, a two-earner couple receiving an average wage $44,600 per spouse in 2012 dollars and turning 65 in 2010 would have paid $722,000 into Social Security and Medicare and can be expected to take out $966,000 in benefits.
So, this couple will be paid about one-third more in benefits than they paid in taxes.
...
In wonk-speak, the figure hes referring to is the "closed-group unfunded obligation estimate for the Social Security program."
In laymans terms, its the inflation-adjusted dollar value of benefits paid beyond the participants tax payments for all past and current beneficiaries by the time of their death.
According to this calculation, past and current generations will pay $71.3 trillion in payroll taxes but will receive $93.4 trillion in benefits.
Adjusting for past and future transfers from the federal Treasury, the difference between "paid-in" and "paid-out" works out to $21.6 trillion.
Source: http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-m...re-and-social-security-what-you-paid-what-yo/