The latest issue of the Social Security Bulletin, the policy journal of the Social Security Administration, has been released. Here are the main papers included in this issue: Cohort Changes in the Retirement Resources of Older Women, by Howard M. Iams, John W. R. Phillips, Kristen Robinson, Lionel Deang, and Irena Dushi This article uses different sources of United States data to focus on the retirement resources of women aged 55–64 in 2004, 1994, and 1984. Notable changes have occurred with women's pathways into retirement resulting from increased education and lifetime work experience. There appear marked cohort differences in potential retirement outcomes. Simplifying the Supplemental Security Income Program: Options for Eliminating the Counting of In-kind Support and Maintenance, by Richard Balkus, James Sears, Susan Wilschke, and Bernard Wixon The Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program's policies for both living arrangements and in-kind support and maintenance (ISM) are intended to direct program benefits toward persons with the least income and support, but they are considered cumbersome to administer and, in some cases, poorly targeted. Benefit restructuring would simplify the SSI program by replacing ISM-related benefit reductions with benefit reductions for recipients living with another adult. This article presents a microsimulation analysis of two benefit restructuring options, showing that the distributional outcomes under both options are inconsistent with a basic rationale of the SSI program. A Legislative History of the Social Security Protection Act of 2004, by Erik Hansen The Social Security Protection Act of 2004 (SSPA), with its administrative remedies and program protections, can be seen as another incremental step in the development of a social insurance program that best meets the evolving needs of American society. This article discusses the legislative history of the SSPA in detail. It also includes summaries of the provisions and a chronology of the modification of these proposals as they passed through the House and Senate, and ultimately to the president's desk.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
New Social Security Bulletin released
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