The Trump administration is exploring the possibility of raising the Social Security retirement age to prevent the program from facing a bankruptcy crisis in 2034.
On September 19, Social Security Administration Commissioner Frank Bisignano was interviewed and asked whether raising the retirement age would be considered. Bisignano responded:
"I believe all options are on the table and will be considered."
Bisignano emphasized that preventing the depletion of Social Security funds would require collective efforts from the Trump administration and Congress to advance "real work" toward system reform.
**Trust Funds Face 2034 Bankruptcy Risk**
According to Social Security Administration data, the program's two major trust funds - the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) fund and the Disability Insurance (DI) fund - are projected to reach bankruptcy by 2034.
One fundamental cause of the funding gap is the profound demographic shift occurring in the United States. The dependency ratio, representing the proportion of active workers to retirees, has continued declining over recent decades.
Data shows that in 1950, an average of 16.5 workers supported one retiree. By 1985, this ratio had fallen to 3.3 to 1, and by 2013, it further declined to 2.8 to 1.
Fewer workers are supporting an increasing number of retirees, creating enormous payment pressure on the Social Security fund.
Once the trust funds are exhausted, unless Congress implements improvements to the program, Social Security may automatically reduce benefits according to law to match incoming payroll tax revenue. Social Security beneficiaries would then face approximately 24% benefit cuts.
To bridge the massive funding gap, policymakers face difficult choices.
Social Security trustees predict that Congress would need to permanently raise payroll tax rates by 3.65 percentage points to address the program's funding shortfall over the next 75 years. This represents another major solution besides adjusting retirement age or cutting benefits.