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Publications by Eric Toder on Social Security

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How Will the Stock Market Collapse Affect Retirement Incomes? (Series/Older Americans' Economic Security)
Barbara Butrica, Karen E. Smith, Eric Toder

Urban Institute projections suggest the stock market collapse will have small effects on most Americans' retirement incomes. It's estimated that 37 percent of Americans born between 1941 and 1965 owned no stocks when the market crashed in 2008 and that income from assets will account for a small share of retirement income, even for those with stocks. For most retirees, Social Security provides the majority of income. Had Social Security been invested in private accounts with equities, the impact of the crash would have been much larger—positive or negative, depending on one's birth cohort and on future market performance.

Posted to Web: June 24, 2009Publication Date: June 24, 2009

Comparisons of MINT 2003 and 2004 Projections with Survey Data (Research Report)
Karen E. Smith, Katherine Michelmore, Eric Toder

This report compares projections of income and assets from the Model of Income in the Near Term (MINT) with data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), the Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF), and the Current Population Survey (CPS). The comparison reveals a fair amount of variability in population characteristics and reported income and assets among these data files. There is no "right" answer, but rather a range of possible answers. For most statistics we compare, MINT's projected values fall between the highest and lowest values among the survey data.

Posted to Web: March 19, 2009Publication Date: December 01, 2008

Are Low-Wage Workers Destined for Low Income at Retirement? (Series/Older Americans' Economic Security)
Barbara Butrica, Eric Toder

Low-wage workers find it difficult to save for retirement. Without savings, they will have to rely on Social Security and pensions. Yet these income sources are based on earnings, which means that low-wage workers will have lower Social Security and pension benefits than higher-wage workers. This brief assesses whether boomers with low earnings between ages 22 and 62 are destined for low income at age 67. We find that nearly two-thirds of this group will end up with low income at retirement, but more than one-third will manage to defy the odds and escape being among the lowest-income older Americans.

Posted to Web: September 26, 2008Publication Date: September 01, 2008

Distributional Analysis of Pension and Social Security Reforms (Research Report)
Eric Toder

In April 2008, the Urban Institute convened an expert panel of researchers inside and outside of government agencies to discuss how best to perform distributional analyses of proposals to reform Social Security and private pensions. The panel discussed key technical issues, including how to measure the baseline income distribution and characterize current policies, how to address changes that alter the timing of taxes and benefits, and how to measure and report gains and losses from policy interventions. The group revealed diverse viewpoints, but we conclude that current methods used in recent UI research fall within the range of reasonable alternatives.

Posted to Web: September 16, 2008Publication Date: September 16, 2008

Boomers at the Bottom: How Will Low Income Boomers Cope with Retirement (Research Report)
Barbara Butrica, Eric Toder, Desmond Toohey

This study uses the Urban Institute's DYNASIM model to project wealth and income at retirement for low-income boomers. The findings suggest that most with low lifetime earnings will also have low incomes at older ages unless they either continue working or move in with others who help support them financially. Saving more, working more consistently over their lifetime, and delaying retirement is projected to improve outcomes for low-earning boomers, but none of these actions will increase retirement living standards dramatically.

Posted to Web: September 16, 2008Publication Date: April 01, 2008

Capitalizing on the Economic Value of Older Adults' Work (Occasional Paper)
Eric Toder, Richard W. Johnson, Gordon Mermin, Serena Lei

Increasing older people's employment rates could reduce the economic pressures of an aging population, and many older adults say they want to delay retirement. Yet, numerous public policies and private practices continue to encourage early retirement. The Urban Institute, with support from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, sponsored an October 2007 roundtable to examine the value of older adults' work. Researchers, practitioners, employers, and policymakers discussed the potential supply of and demand for older workers, the benefits of working longer, barriers to continued employment, and policy solutions to encourage work at older ages. This document summarizes the issues and discussion.

Posted to Web: May 13, 2008Publication Date: May 01, 2008

How the Income Tax Treatment of Saving and Social Security Benefits May Affect Boomers' Retirement Incomes (Series/The Retirement Project Occasional Papers)
Barbara Butrica, Karen E. Smith, Eric Toder

Income tax provisions affect the buildup of retirement assets during workers' careers and after-tax income following retirement. This paper uses the Urban Institute's DYNASIM model to simulate how potential changes in the tax treatment of retirement saving, Social Security benefits, and income from assets outside retirement accounts may affect boomers' retirement incomes. Changes in the income thresholds for taxing Social Security benefits have the largest impact on middle-income boomers, while changes in contribution limits for retirement saving plans and tax rates on capital gains and dividends have the largest impact on the highest-income boomers.

Posted to Web: March 14, 2008Publication Date: March 01, 2008

Modeling Income in the Near Term 5 (Research Report)
Karen E. Smith, Melissa Favreault, Caroline Ratcliffe, Barbara Butrica, Eric Toder, Jon M. Bakija

This report describes the work the Urban Institute performed to generate the Model of Income in the Near Term, Version 5 (MINT5). MINT is a tool developed for The Division of Policy Evaluation (DPE) of the Social Security Administration (SSA) to analyze the distributional consequences of Social Security reform proposals. MINT is a micro-level data file of individuals born between 1926 and 2018. It starts with a rich set of income and demographic characteristics from the 1990 to 1996 Survey of Income and Program Particpation (SIPP) data linked to SSA data on earnings and benefits. MINT then projects these characteristics until death or the year 2099.

Posted to Web: November 19, 2007Publication Date: November 05, 2007

What Will Happen to Poverty Rates Among Older Americans in the Future and Why? (Series/Older Americans' Economic Security)
Eric Toder

Poverty rates among the elderly have declined sharply over the past 50 years. We project that the poverty rate for the 62 and older population will continue to decline because of projected growth in real earnings. But we also project that relative poverty--the share of people who fall below an unchanging percentage of average income--will increase. The two main sources of higher relative poverty are the increased share of retirees who are single and divorced and the reduced growth in benefits associated with the increase in the Social Security normal retirement age. [View the corresponding press release]

Posted to Web: November 01, 2005Publication Date: November 01, 2005

Changing Demographics of the Retired Population (Series/Older Americans' Economic Security)
Karen E. Smith, Eric Toder

The retired portion of the population will increase in the next two decades and its demographic composition will change. Newly eligible retirees are increasingly better educated, but that will level off after 2012. Larger shares will be divorced or never-married and smaller shares married or widowed. The share of whites will decline, while shares of other groups, especially Hispanics, will increase. The changing demographics of the retiring population will affect Social Security financing and retirement policies. In particular, while economic growth will reduce poverty, there will be more retirees in groups who have historically been at higher risk of poverty. [View the corresponding press release]

Posted to Web: November 01, 2005Publication Date: November 01, 2005

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