LIFT THE CAP ON SOCIAL SECURITY
WHEREAS, under the Roosevelt administration, Social Security was enacted as an insurance program to provide financial support to retired workers and to surviving dependents of workers who die or who are incapacitated; and
WHEREAS, for several generations, Social Security has been credited with reducing poverty among retired workers, particularly women; and
WHEREAS, wages, pensions and financial security have been reduced for the average private sector employee, and attempts are underway to reduce job security in a similar way for public sector workers; and
WHEREAS, only the wealthiest households are able to save the recommended 10 percent of annual income for retirement; and
WHEREAS, retirement security is being replaced by retirement insecurity through stagnating wages, poorly designed retirement plans and contingency and part-time employment, and many economists, including Teresa Ghilarducci of the New School for Social Research, predict an impending retirement crisis; and
WHEREAS, those retiring without adequate income will rely on Social Security benefits for an increasing proportion of their income; and
WHEREAS, the trustees of the Social Security Trust Fund have advised that, after 2034, the fund will no longer pay 100 percent of benefits; and
WHEREAS, cutting Social Security benefits by raising the retirement age further erodes retirement security:
RESOLVED, that the American Federation of Teachers will support the augmentation of the Social Security Trust Fund by calling upon Congress to eliminate the cap on Social Security wages, currently at $128,400, and urges its locals to do the same.
(2018)