The Inequitable Effects of Raising the Retirement Age on Blacks and Low-Wage Workers
In: The review of black political economy: analyzing policy prescriptions designed to reduce inequalities, Band 46, Heft 1, S. 22-37
Abstract
Increasing the Social Security Full Retirement Age (FRA) adversely affects all workers because an increase is equivalent to an across-the-board cut in benefits. Raising the FRA leaves workers with two bad choices: working longer or living on reduced monthly benefits for the rest of their lives. Working longer further penalizes Blacks and low-wage workers because they are unlikely to live long enough to recoup payments foregone as a result of delayed claiming. Instead of cutting Social Security benefits, retirement policy makers should update and modernize the 401(k) and IRA systems to provide workers with better options.
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