From a survey conducted by Greenwald and Associates for the National Academy of Social Insurance (NASI) in June 2014:
1 comment:
Anonymous
said...
Although the table is in a report of a survey, it is not survey data, but data from the 2013 Social Security Trustees Report. The 2014 Trustees Report has slightly different numbers, and is at
The relevant numbers are in the third numeric column, and give reductions in the financing gap, so positive numbers are reductions and negative numbers increases (the opposite of the table in the NASI report). The Trustees Report gives many additional options, and it gives more precise definitions of the options.
1 comment:
Although the table is in a report of a survey, it is not survey data, but data from the 2013 Social Security Trustees Report. The 2014 Trustees Report has slightly different numbers, and is at
http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/solvency/provisions/summary.html
The relevant numbers are in the third numeric column, and give reductions in the financing gap, so positive numbers are reductions and negative numbers increases (the opposite of the table in the NASI report). The Trustees Report gives many additional options, and it gives more precise definitions of the options.
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