From a piece by Alicia Munnell, the director of the Boston College Center for Retirement Research for Market Watch:
The Social Security Administration
faces an enormous challenge to maintain its services as retiring baby
boomers increase the demand and budget constraints and retiring staff
limit the agency’s capacity to deliver. ...
To investigate how individuals claimed or intend to claim their retirement benefits, my colleague JP Aubry
surveyed 2,600 people ages 57-70. The responses showed that, while 60%
of respondents applied or intend to apply online (a somewhat higher
share than the SSA data show), only 43% of respondents claim completely
online — that is, without contacting SSA in-person or by phone. Scaling
the survey results to the SSA data for online applications suggests
that 37% of retirees claim completely online ...
To better understand the factors associated with online claiming
patterns, JP estimated a regression that relates respondents’
demographic characteristics to full online claiming (see Figure 3). Two
of the characteristics most associated with claiming completely online
are the use of online banking and Turbo Tax — both of which are proxies
for a high level of comfort with online financial tools. Additionally,
claiming completely online is associated with living in a metropolitan
area, being college educated, and being married. On the other hand, the
characteristics most associated with not claiming completely online are —
essentially — being nonwhite. ...
In response to in-depth questioning, respondents identified four reasons
for contacting an SSA representative: 1) complex issues that clearly
require an SSA representative, such as discussing the specifics of
spousal and survivor benefits; 2) general aversions to online services,
like a concern about data privacy; 3) straightforward inquiries that
could be addressed without contacting a representative, like checking
the benefit amount and eligibility; and 4) obstacles to online claiming
that could be remedied by SSA service improvements, such as fixing data
errors. ...
Note that this piece concerns retirement claims, not the more complicated survivor claims, not to mention the vastly more complicated disability and SSI claims.