CPA Discusses New Bill to Make Social Security TAX FREE

This video discusses the "You Earned it You Keep it Act," currently being reviewed in Congress. The Act, if passes will make all Social Security payments tax free to the recipients. It does face quite a few hurdles, the most difficult of which is getting support in an election year.
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Пікірлер: 890

  • @gracewright7938
    @gracewright79382 ай бұрын

    This would be a good time for the government to pay back the loans they took from SS without our permission.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    they are paying it back right now, as intended. your permission came from your elected representatives. it was a good deal both for SS and for the country.

  • @randylangton7910

    @randylangton7910

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-os1tm3te3f how do you figure that?

  • @CeresKLee

    @CeresKLee

    2 ай бұрын

    The government is never borrow money - it prints it. Study MMT. The "debt" is a myth.

  • @philterzian9162

    @philterzian9162

    2 ай бұрын

    With what? The government is broke, that’s why they are borrowing or printing $2T a year.

  • @johngill2853

    @johngill2853

    2 ай бұрын

    The government is you. We have elections to send your chosen representative to congress. And all money borrowed will be payed back with interest from your tax dollars

  • @parler8698
    @parler86982 ай бұрын

    There should never be a tax on a tax.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    the tax is not on a tax. it is tax on "profits" from a tax that is not really a tax: its a savings account.

  • @johngill2853

    @johngill2853

    2 ай бұрын

    You know you only paid half the tax your employer paid the other half. Your employer wrote that off on his taxes and now you're paying the tax on it when you retire

  • @hanko5750

    @hanko5750

    2 ай бұрын

    And yet your tax return (over payment) is added to your income for the following year. Always trying to stick it to you at ther drive-thru

  • @johngill2853

    @johngill2853

    2 ай бұрын

    @@hanko5750 please explain what you are talking about? Tax refunds are not income

  • @ra1der5

    @ra1der5

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-os1tm3te3fBy now everyone should be aware Social Security is NOT a savings account. There is no government pot of money set aside with your name on it. SS is best described as a Ponzi scheme as it relies on new workers and population growth to pay for current recipients. Most of us will be lucky if we get out what we paid in.

  • @warrenpeece1726
    @warrenpeece17262 ай бұрын

    I think it's fair indeed to forego taxation on SSA benefits. That's because the money we "contribute" to SSA while working is ALREADY taxed as ordinary income.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    warren, yes your odinary income is taxed as ordinary income. then if you choose to save some of your ordinary income, the interest you get from your savings is taxed as ordinary income. this is exactly what happens with your SS. most of your SS benefit is from "interest." it was originally not taxed because the government thought it made no sense to tax income intended to prevent poverty. then they realized that a lot of people collecting benefits were in no danger of poverty, so they decided to tax part of SS for people with sufficient outside income to not "need' to be protected from poverty. This is really quite reasonable and fair, but it's a balancing act. And unfortunately the enemies of SS have taught you to believe it's a tax on a tax which sounds like you are being cheated. you are not. quite the opposite. but a lot of people like to believe they are being cheated by the government. it seems to be human nature.

  • @davidgerwin7885

    @davidgerwin7885

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@user-os1tm3te3fFor those at the low end the SS tax is zero. For those a little above the low end like me the tax amount is inconsequentially small. Like less than 500 dollars. In some years mine is less than 100 dollars.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    @@davidgerwin7885david, i think you are agreeing with me. a long time ago i learned not to worry about "unfair" taxes. you can drive yourself crazy feeling cheated. in the grand scheme of things you (we) are getting a very good deal. from a lot of years writing about SS and trying to answer questions i get the feeling that most people are imagining they are being cheated when they are not. but even when you are really being cheated it is far better to just walk away, forget about it and get on with real life. at the risk of repeating myself, i think the big problem people have with having their SS taxed is that they think they are being taxed twice, they are not. they have been told that they are being taxed twice by people who are paid a lot of money to make SS look like a bad deal. even if you were being taxed twice---you are not---you come out way ahead with SS.

  • @rosemarywhitney4680

    @rosemarywhitney4680

    2 ай бұрын

    aansolutly!

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    @@rosemarywhitney4680 i don't know if you read the other replies to warren, or if you are replying to one of those replies. but in case you didn't and aren't, SS is not taxed as ordinary income. ordinary income is taxed as ordinary income. then if you put some of your after tax income into a ordinary savings account, the interest you get is taxed as ordinary income. the same thing is true of SS, only SS is much safer than ordinary bank and your benfits which have earned the equivalent of about 5% interest is 1) not taxed at all because at first it seemed silly to tax "anti poverty" income (like if you are in the zero tax bracket on your ordinary income). or2) taxed on part of your SS income because together with your other income you make too much to be in danger of serious poverty. or 3) if you make even more outside income you are taxed (at your ordinary tax rate) on 85% of your SS income. it really is quite fair and reasonable if you look at it stright and not while the devil is whispering in your ear "it's a tax on a tax, no fair!".

  • @bobl6329
    @bobl63292 ай бұрын

    I have seen 2 billionaires on CNBC, who both said they shouldn't get Social Security with their wealth. One of them went on to complain that he and his wife were taking in over $4000 in Social Security(not sure if he meant each or just one), and he thought it was ridiculous. I guess he forgot that he didn't have to file for it in the first place.

  • @billpace6

    @billpace6

    2 ай бұрын

    And he also conveniently forgot that he can STOP it at any time. He's a billionaire. He should be smart enough to figure that out.

  • @richardc488

    @richardc488

    2 ай бұрын

    They paid into SS they need to get it

  • @bobl6329

    @bobl6329

    2 ай бұрын

    @richardc488 I think the point was they were implying despite paying in they shouldn't get it because of their wealth. I get they paid in, and not my statements, it is theirs.

  • @stephenharper6638

    @stephenharper6638

    2 ай бұрын

    They ALWAYS take the money!

  • @f430ferrari5

    @f430ferrari5

    2 ай бұрын

    @@bobl6329that’s just a stupid reason. Unbelievable. So per you because somebody is wealthy they simply don’t deserve to get what is owed. 😂🤣 Instead per you, reward bad behavior. Give to the lazy who never earned enough. If you had two sons, this is what you would do?

  • @idahoron
    @idahoron2 ай бұрын

    The cap on social security tax at 160k needs to be taken off. It's crazy that the government is taxing low income people, but the wealthiest people pay nothing for social security tax over 160k.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    you are probably paying something like 5000 per year counting your employer's contribution. This adds up to something like 200 thousand over forty years. This may sound lke a lot, but it is what it costs to pay for your needs for twenty years after you can no longer work. By your "scrap the cap" theory a "rich" person making something like 500,000 per year would pay something like50,000 per year, or 2 million dollars over 40 years. but he would get essentially the same benefits you are...about 200 thousand over twenty years. You are asking him to pay two million dollars for 200,000 in return. He won't do it, and he has more power than you do. But do you really think he should be paying for your groceries just because he has more money than you? how do you feel about paying for the groceries of someone who has less money thnan you. note the figures i used above are not corrected for interest so use them only to illustrate a point not to prove it without looking at all the complication.

  • @idahoron

    @idahoron

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-os1tm3te3f 100% of my income is taxed for social security. There should not be a cap period.

  • @mystuff4475

    @mystuff4475

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-os1tm3te3f sadly, there are many people in this country that see no problem taking someone else's money with the reason being "they can afford it"

  • @mikephillips8648

    @mikephillips8648

    2 ай бұрын

    Everyone pays all the way up to 160000

  • @kevinkasp

    @kevinkasp

    2 ай бұрын

    Sorry, that doesn't make sense. Social Security has a maximum amount it can pay out when you retire. So it doesn't make sense to take social security tax from you with the promise to pay it back to you in your old age, if the rules (maximum amount that can be paid to a retiree) won't allow the government to pay you back.

  • @javaskull88
    @javaskull882 ай бұрын

    If Congress hadn’t dragged their feet on this for decades, this wouldn’t be a crisis now.

  • @Lokie-cd2hw
    @Lokie-cd2hw2 ай бұрын

    If congress can fund foreign countries and illegal immigration, they could just help fund Social Security instead. Why is our government so adverse to putting Americans first?

  • @martincagle9226

    @martincagle9226

    2 ай бұрын

    Kickbacks

  • @johnbelt5204

    @johnbelt5204

    Ай бұрын

    Because they hate us...?

  • @simul8guy75

    @simul8guy75

    24 күн бұрын

    That's easy...the Demwits are in charge. It's like the inmates running the asylum...

  • @growlinbear
    @growlinbearАй бұрын

    Taxing social security is disrespectful of us seniors and a disgrace to this country!

  • @johnbelt5204

    @johnbelt5204

    Ай бұрын

    The big problem with taxing SS is, your original SS payment was already taxed so that money is getting taxed at least twice....

  • @ryanwilliams989
    @ryanwilliams98922 күн бұрын

    The utilization of after-tax money and tax-free growth makes opening a Roth IRA very advantageous. Through a careful guidance of my FA, I did not pay taxes on my withdrawals of $2.86 million when I retired.

  • @TheresaAnderson-kf5xw

    @TheresaAnderson-kf5xw

    22 күн бұрын

    I don't regret the numerous financial mistakes I've made in the past since I've learnt from them. But the biggest one was planning my finances without consulting with a licensed financial counsel.

  • @maryHenokNft

    @maryHenokNft

    22 күн бұрын

    Indeed, I did make use of a financial counselor. As I get closer to retirement, their advice has been really helpful. I thought compound interest on index funds wouldn't be sufficient because I started late. It's amusing how I've done better than colleagues who have more years of investment experience. I've profited more than $886k tax free.

  • @maggysterling33254

    @maggysterling33254

    22 күн бұрын

    @@maryHenokNftKudos on the effective execution of innovative ideas and tactics that lead to significant advancement. As I seek guidance from a trustworthy advisor, would you be willing to share details about the individual assisting you?

  • @maryHenokNft

    @maryHenokNft

    22 күн бұрын

    The decision on when to pick an Adviser is a very personal one. I take guidance from *Gertrude Margaret Quinto* to meet my growth goals and avoid mistakes, she's well-qualified and her page can be easily found on the net.

  • @BiancaSherly-qt6sb

    @BiancaSherly-qt6sb

    22 күн бұрын

    My needs are kind of unique and complex. I'll contact her nonetheless, and I hope I'm able to make something out of it.

  • @daveclark6324
    @daveclark63242 ай бұрын

    I did not know those historical facts about Social Security. I found them interesting - thanks for sharing 👍

  • @coni-ne5km
    @coni-ne5km2 ай бұрын

    . The way our government has been operating these days, I don't think that Bill has a chance. If our representatives really wanted to cut spending, they should reduce gov't bloat.

  • @kangta13

    @kangta13

    2 ай бұрын

    When you’re spending someone else’s money, government is like who cares..

  • @stephenharper6638

    @stephenharper6638

    2 ай бұрын

    These days? Since the beginning of time! :) An interesting book was written, the authors starting with the premise of bloat and mismanagement, to the authors(2) surprise, we actually get good bang for the buck.

  • @teekay_1

    @teekay_1

    2 ай бұрын

    Get rid of 25% of government workers, stop sending so much money overseas, stop paying off student loans, secure the border no more build-back-better bills and anything else you can imagine would be hard medicine for a few years, but would leave us with a stronger economy. There are lots of ways to put our fiscal house in order, but everybody will have to give on at least 1 or 2 things they want. If we don't do it voluntarily now, it will be done involuntarily later. As to this bill, it's a trojan horse. Once you get the middle and upper middle class bearing the bulk of the SS burden, popular support will wither away within 2-3 years. So be careful what you ask for, social security might be changed in a way that's very disadvantageous to retired people (e.g. no more cost of living adjustments).

  • @gmbenz2482

    @gmbenz2482

    2 ай бұрын

    Actually, the greatest cost to the government has been the huge tax breaks granted over the last 40 years to billionaires and multi-millionaires. The reagan tax cuts, the w bush tax cuts, and the trump tax cuts. It's why these people dominate our economic and political systems, and price the rest of us out of our own markets, such as their takeover of the housing market. Our economy was fairly healthy for most of us from the mid-1930s to the mid-1980s.

  • @f430ferrari5

    @f430ferrari5

    2 ай бұрын

    @@gmbenz2482just lies. The ones who always pay less taxes are the lazy poor ones. You don’t even know how FICA tax works and what one eventually gets back via SS/Medicare. It’s a scam against the hard working rich. Pay in more and get less back. Why don’t you study the SS income formula. Medicare is another fraud against the hard working rich. Have to pay more in premiums based on making more. You are probably in the 12% bracket while the rich you complain about are at the 34% bracket. There is a reason why Jesus said 10% for all related to tithe. Let it sink in. Jesus never said the wealthy tithe 20% or 50%. Jesus doesn’t enable bad behavior.

  • @JANAVEL1655
    @JANAVEL16552 ай бұрын

    You already paid taxes on Social Security. They tax it twice and never adjusted the $25,000 - $35,000 stuff for inflation in about 40 years. The government does not have a revenue problem. They have a SPENDING problem. It does not matter what the government collects. They always have and will spend more to buy lots from the sheeple. They could collect 1 quadrillion $$ next year and they still would not pay off the debt - they'd simply start new federal programs. Social Security would already be "Shored up" if they did not mix it into the general fund and spend it. It should be SEGREGATED $, invested and for, and only for, paying SS benefits.

  • @brandyraccoon1473

    @brandyraccoon1473

    2 ай бұрын

    Easy fix: any shortfall of the federal budget can be clawed out of the pockets of Congress critters by the IRS. Result: federal budget miraculously balanced overnight.

  • @sambira

    @sambira

    2 ай бұрын

    @@brandyraccoon1473 Yup. And the money they make from "investing" in the market (like there's no insider trading going on)... Lol.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    schmidt needs to chck me on this. retirement income is normally taxed fully. this is because most of your retirement money comes from interest or profits from stock. SS was not taxed at all because it does not seem reasonable to give people money to keep them out of poverty and then take it away with a tax. but people who are doing very well in retirement with extra income are now taxed on part of their SS. this helps keep your SS contribution smaller.

  • @ItsEverythingElse

    @ItsEverythingElse

    2 ай бұрын

    Social Security benefits are not double-taxed any more than withdrawals from your IRA/401k are.

  • @blacksunshine489

    @blacksunshine489

    2 ай бұрын

    @@ItsEverythingElseExcept they were not taxed at all for the first 40 years till Reagan wanted to tax SS and did.

  • @robedmund9948
    @robedmund99482 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the calm, reasonable, and thorough analysis of a very complex problem.

  • @TheRealEdStoner
    @TheRealEdStoner2 ай бұрын

    One of the best things this country can do is teach finance and money management in K-12. The fact that so many people depend solely on social security is not good.

  • @Howdy1957

    @Howdy1957

    2 ай бұрын

    Some school districts offer some type of finance course , it is optional. Maybe families could educate their children on personal finances and leave the other areas to the teachers. They already teach health, socialization,reproductive health, advocacy etc when are they going to teach math and science to foster a competent work force. Maybe all schools could become residential facilities and then the parents wouldn’t see them at all and would have no responsibilities!

  • @carolinecollins2441

    @carolinecollins2441

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@Howdy1957 unfortunately, most adults are not financially literate. Parents can't teach their kids what they themselves don't know.

  • @timtorkelson7201

    @timtorkelson7201

    2 ай бұрын

    100%!! Spot on,amazing how many young people are clueless about even 401K or more importantly, Roth IRA's and how they work,and what a person can have using DCA methods!!

  • @user-vy7iw4lf5o

    @user-vy7iw4lf5o

    24 күн бұрын

    I have been saying this for years. The financial world makes mega bucks keeping people dumb down.

  • @mikcall54
    @mikcall542 ай бұрын

    This is only if you have 2 or more incomes. There is already no taxes paid on Soc Sec if it's your only income. You do not even have to file a tax return if it's your only income.

  • @buffycat4641
    @buffycat4641Ай бұрын

    I would probably be considered lower middle class. I am single and on my $50,000 to $55,000 (depending on interest) I have always had to pay tax on 85% of my Social Security. So no, it is definitely not only the wealthy who are taxed on their Social Security. Even 14 years ago when I first retired and was making less income, I was still taxed on 85%.

  • @MJA5
    @MJA52 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately the government taxes my military retirement pay as well.

  • @dipaknadkarni62

    @dipaknadkarni62

    2 ай бұрын

    Me too.

  • @MarkMaxwell-author

    @MarkMaxwell-author

    2 ай бұрын

    So sad. We need government for the people, not for the big corporations and special interests.

  • @puravida5683

    @puravida5683

    2 ай бұрын

    Mine to, after 21 years of service! So much, for thanks for your service!

  • @jackbeams375

    @jackbeams375

    2 ай бұрын

    And me to. I love how congress folks thanks us so much for our service but we don't mind taxing you. And now pay for tricare and prescriptions. I just love it

  • @jackbeams375

    @jackbeams375

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh and I pay outright for Medicare per month. I still work and Medicare is still taken out of my check. What's that all about?

  • @bob_frazier
    @bob_frazier2 ай бұрын

    Our government prints money out of thin air, and yet Social Security somehow has to ballance just like my checkbook. Grr!

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    money only works if the books are balanced. government, and every bank, can "print" money, but if that money does not generate new wealth things go badly.

  • @DoubleDogDare54
    @DoubleDogDare542 ай бұрын

    It's an election year. Social Security and Medicare are the third rail for retirees and old people ALWAYS vote. Frankly, my mother was still working and collecting SS in '83 when taxing SS went into effect. Her problem was solved by her sudden "retirement" from her job - she was still working but she got paid in cash. What Uncle Sam didn't know didn't hurt him. I suspect many other working seniors did the same thing and still do.

  • @jetfan6129

    @jetfan6129

    2 ай бұрын

    It would be political suicide to vote against this bill.

  • @JohnJohn-wr1jo

    @JohnJohn-wr1jo

    2 ай бұрын

    It will never make it to the floor. This congress has taken smoke and mirrors to a new level. Never before has a session accomplished so little. 90% of them can't manage their own checkbook.

  • @RJN82
    @RJN822 ай бұрын

    Another great video - thanks! I consider your posts to be required continuing education for my retirement.

  • @tjml69
    @tjml692 ай бұрын

    Just watched your video, and I appreciate your information. My one concern about this one is that you feel confident that Congress will fix this if it is shown to be a major problem. I'm curious if you have not seen the working in the house lately. I don't share your confidence. That said, I do want to say that I find most of your videos helpful as I get closer to retirement.

  • @richardc488
    @richardc4882 ай бұрын

    Thanks Mr Schmidt

  • @reebeeable
    @reebeeable2 ай бұрын

    Thanks for explaining the implications in simple terms. You changed my thinking on this.

  • @martyc2637
    @martyc26372 ай бұрын

    Just raise the 25,000 taxable threshold each year. It should be at least 50,000 now!

  • @headlibrarian1996
    @headlibrarian19962 ай бұрын

    It isn't enough just to make SS itself non-taxable. SS qualifies as provisional income for things like IRMAA and ACA subsidies, and to the extent you pay or increase an IRMAA penalty or have your ACA subsidy reduced or eliminated you have been silently taxed on your SS benefits.

  • @Satjr35031

    @Satjr35031

    2 ай бұрын

    You need sufficient SS and provisional income to trigger IRMMA

  • @sadiegirl5312

    @sadiegirl5312

    2 ай бұрын

    What the heck are IRMAA AND ACA Subsidies?

  • @Satjr35031

    @Satjr35031

    2 ай бұрын

    @@sadiegirl5312 IRMMA are extra fees you get deducted from the basic Medicare charge The more income you have in addition to SS you pay extra. This year as a single filer the first IRMMA is $103,000 & $206,000 as a couple.The Medicare deduction would be around $233 instead of the $174. if your income is higher the deduction gets higher. They look back two years at your income to determine your IRMMA. The ACA is the Affordable Care Act. Not Sure how that even plays into SS.

  • @headlibrarian1996

    @headlibrarian1996

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Satjr35031 Social Security income is included in the calculation to determine your eligibility for ACA subsidies.

  • @faster98

    @faster98

    2 ай бұрын

    Would you be willing to cut the defense budget from $800 million back down to the $250 million we spent when Reagan was President?

  • @bigbandguru
    @bigbandguruАй бұрын

    Count me in!

  • @patd2765
    @patd27652 ай бұрын

    Great stuff as usual Jeff, but I need more charts and numbers. It's hard to keep up with the verbal.

  • @dontwannhandle
    @dontwannhandle2 ай бұрын

    How it that our government is constantly able to dish out billions to foreign countries but neglect our seniors?

  • @heymoe1179
    @heymoe11792 ай бұрын

    This is the first I've hear that in 2034 recipients will only receive 70 to 75%. I've always read and heard it was 80%. This number is going the wrong way! Three actions need to happen to avoid that from happening...#1 the employee/employer contribution needs to increase incrementally from current 6.2% each to 6.25%, 6.3%, 6.35% etc. #2 the income cap where that 6.2% stops needs to increase incrementally from current $168,000 to $170,000. $175,000, $180,000 etc. And #3 the full retirement age need to increase incrementally from current 67 to 67/2 mo, 67/4 mo, 67/6 mo etc. Any one of these will save SS for another decade past '34...do all three and we are good for a few generations. Of course we don't have anyone in D.C. (Congress) with a spine...so nothing will happen until the last minute in 2034...just like how they handle fiscal budgets on 31 Sep of every year.

  • @jmmysms

    @jmmysms

    2 ай бұрын

    I have always been for a gradual increase in employee and employer contribution. Also increasing the max income gradually with the understanding that those people will eventually get a higher benefit. Instead of increasing full retirement age I might suggest increasing the early retirement age from 62 by four months a year for four years. Too little too late?

  • @heymoe1179

    @heymoe1179

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jmmysms Agreed on all points. But regardless of our "excellent" ideas... something must happen to avoid what will inevitably happen in 2034.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    raising the min age would be a death sentence to people already old. if they have paid for their own SS -they have] there should be no reason they can't retire. in fact the only fix SS needs is to raise the payroll tax about one dollar per week per year (while wages are going up ten dollars per week)to pay for our own longer life expectancy after we can no longer work. @@jmmysms

  • @tedhamilton2362
    @tedhamilton236221 күн бұрын

    Considering that MANY rely on Social Security for the majority of retirement income, it is reasonable to reduce or eliminate taxes on it. Most of the middle class do not have large amounts of retirement savings. Also, most pensions have been eliminated except for those in public service (the elected).

  • @turnertruckandtractor
    @turnertruckandtractor2 ай бұрын

    The cap on wages should be removed and the tax rate should be increased from 6.2 to 6.3. SS tax on benefits should be removed. Government spending should be reduced.

  • @huskerjpg
    @huskerjpg2 ай бұрын

    There will be no repeal of income taxes on SS income. There might be a small re-do of the tax tables to subject a smaller portion of SS income to tax, but that's it.

  • @thullraven1
    @thullraven12 ай бұрын

    SS needs to be tax free! Actually, from a business standpoint, it's a win-win for the beneficiary and the Government if this bill goes into effect. Let me explain. The beneficiary keeps more of his payment, therefore, he/she might be inclined to take it sooner as the payout will be better. The Government wins because they WANT people to take it sooner rather than later, so the payout is a smaller amount for life to the beneficiary as opposed to the beneficiary waiting until FRA or age 70 to draw SS.

  • @thullraven1

    @thullraven1

    2 ай бұрын

    @@joejones6842 In the long run maybe, but the Government encourages people to wait to collect because the odds grow higher that people die before that tap into it for a long time or in some cases, at all. Example: My friend was planning to draw SS at FRA of 67. He died of a heart attack at 66. He didn't get a penny of the money he put into SS. If he took it at 62 or even 63, he would at least have been getting some of his money that he contributed to the program.

  • @brookswilson1072
    @brookswilson10722 ай бұрын

    Taxing a tax is pretty much taxation without representation. There should never have been a tax on SS. The only way to make SS healthy again is 1) for Congress to pay back what they have borrowed from SS and 2) pass legislation that prevents further borrowing. We all know, however, that Congress will never do this.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    congress IS paying back what they borrowed right now. borrowing and lending is a normal part of the way money works, it benefits both parties.

  • @brookswilson1072

    @brookswilson1072

    2 ай бұрын

    Well, I think they should go a step further and pass legislation banning any further "loans" from SS to fund government. If that had been in place initially, SS would be awash in money and the threat of disappearing or being heavily curtailed would be non-existent.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    brooks, i know a few things that make your idea improbable. the loans were what normal trust funds do and were good for both SS and the govrernment. SS would have exactly the same money it has today. th threat of disappearing is mostly a lie by the people who want to scare you into letting the destroy it. it is in no danger of disappearing. it will need a very small increase in the "tax" in order for you to pay for your needs over a longer life expectancy after you can no longer work.@@brookswilson1072

  • @faster98

    @faster98

    2 ай бұрын

    Taxing 85% of the ss benefits is no different than taxing a pension that you contributed to. You are paying tax on the portion of the benefits that are over and above the amount contributed by you and your employer.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    @@faster98 that's the best way to think about it, if anyone understands it. i am not sure the math works out exactly, but worrying about the last penny is self-deception and misses the impotant point. i wish Schmidt would point this out. He is pretty good; maybe he uderstands his audience won't get it, and if he tells them something they won't believe he will lose them.

  • @maxshiraz3447
    @maxshiraz34472 ай бұрын

    It's appaling that SS is ever taxed. You are forced to pay tax to fund the useless scheme. If there's any debate about it's affordability, then that discussion should be about the infinite government spending

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    that useless scheme has kept old people out of poverty for the last eighty years. very much unlike what happened befor SS was invented. SS is affordable. since we are going to live longer we will need to pay in more. it's called a tax, but it's really a way to save for retirement in a very well protected savings and insurance plan. the extra needed for your longer retiremet amounts to about a dollar per week per year while wages are going up ten dollars per week per year

  • @greglane3978

    @greglane3978

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank Bill Clinton for taxing SS.

  • @bridgecross

    @bridgecross

    2 ай бұрын

    @@greglane3978 So wrong, off by 10 years. Thank *Reagan*

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    o.k. thans Bill, we needed that. all pensions are taxed because most of the money is "interest" that is income, not what you "paid in". SS income was not taxed because it didn't make sense to tax money intended to reduce poverty. but later it was recognized that lot of people getting SS also had other income that kept them far from poverty. by taxing this it was possible to keep the payroll tax lower than it would otherwise be.@@greglane3978

  • @deborahsevigny4763

    @deborahsevigny4763

    2 ай бұрын

    No, the discussion should be about the richest people should pay taxes.

  • @MgtowRubicon
    @MgtowRubicon2 ай бұрын

    "You earned it, you keep it." should apply to all income.

  • @conniechapin9278
    @conniechapin92782 ай бұрын

    I think you left out a couple of things. Like the threshold to pay the taxes on SS has never been adjusted. So a lot more people are paying the tax, just because of inflation. And none of this tax goes toward SS.

  • @randys6220

    @randys6220

    2 ай бұрын

    He did cover that.

  • @jimselvy6157

    @jimselvy6157

    2 ай бұрын

    Also, the threshold for paying is going up every year but the doughnut hole (i.e. $250K) does not. Eventually they will meet so it will be tax on all wages.

  • @DrummerDanVa

    @DrummerDanVa

    2 ай бұрын

    I think this is the real problem. Initially only the wealthy paid taxes on social security. Determine what inflation has been all these years since 1984, change the threshhold amounts, and then index it to inflation like every other government benefit.

  • @jmmysms

    @jmmysms

    2 ай бұрын

    You might want to check that. I believe taxes on SS go back to SS.

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst28782 ай бұрын

    This is long overdue.

  • @michaelmills645
    @michaelmills6452 ай бұрын

    thanks great information.!!

  • @jerseyjoe106
    @jerseyjoe1062 ай бұрын

    Best idea the government ever had!

  • @jimv77
    @jimv772 ай бұрын

    I always thought it was interesting that one item can be taxed over and over and over again when being exchanged in ownership. An $80,000 new vehicle/boat/etc getting a new owner every year would generate how much sales tax during each registration during the lifetime of this item.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    the tax is on the transaction, not the boat. the money you pay the boat owner will be udes by him to buy something else and so on...this is called economics. when you buy the boat you know it i going to cost you the price plus the tax. you chose to buy it on that understanding. the country needs taxes to pay for what it does for you. if you don't think it does anything for you, don't worry, you are not the only one. if they relied on you to pay for what you get no one would ever pay for anything and pretty soon we woldn't have a country anymore.

  • @johnnyretires

    @johnnyretires

    2 ай бұрын

    The “tax” is on registration. For example if you bought a used farm truck and used it only on your farm you would not have to register it every year unless you drove it on public roads.

  • @jimv77

    @jimv77

    2 ай бұрын

    @@johnnyretires So you have to have the vehicle delivered to the farm by flatbed and bring back fuel for use in a can/tank and ship the truck to the shop for repairs? It never touches public roads......

  • @johnnyretires

    @johnnyretires

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jimv77 if you are a farmer u may very well have a fuel tank on the farm. If you are a farmer you likely have a trailer to tow that truck I personally know farmers that have a vehicle only used on the farm. They don’t register it. Further sales tax is a state and local tax, not a federal tax.

  • @johnnyretires

    @johnnyretires

    2 ай бұрын

    @@jimv77 I do agree with you that once sales tax is collected on the sale of an item it should not be collected again if the item is resold.

  • @jimmyz5831
    @jimmyz58312 ай бұрын

    This bill would represent the largest tax increase in memory for the higher earners. Thanks for the very good info.

  • @maxshiraz3447
    @maxshiraz34472 ай бұрын

    Government does NOT need to charge more tax to fund this. Just stop the infinite spending

  • @michaelmcinnis911

    @michaelmcinnis911

    2 ай бұрын

    First of all they should stop printing money out of thin air. Second, they should stop giving ANY money or benefits to illegals crossing the border! And I disagree with Geoff; a government shut down would NOT be a disaster; they keep the necessary people working through the shutdown. It's a political ploy; smoke and mirrors.

  • @ItsEverythingElse

    @ItsEverythingElse

    2 ай бұрын

    SS is separate from the general funding.

  • @georgemckenna462

    @georgemckenna462

    2 ай бұрын

    @@ItsEverythingElse Thank you! Recall when Joe Biden was one of the voices trying to "privatise" SS in 2007? This would have been just in time to loose it all in the 2008 melt down.

  • @David9523

    @David9523

    2 ай бұрын

    @@ItsEverythingElse If you believe that I have a bridge to sell you

  • @johngill2853

    @johngill2853

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@David9523it is. Stop believing conspiracy theories

  • @philterzian9162
    @philterzian91622 ай бұрын

    I’ve been self employed for over 30 years. So I’ve always paid both halves of my FICA taxes. But when I started receiving my benefit I also have to pay income taxes on the half that was paid by my mythical employer. Has never seemed fair to me.

  • @johngill2853

    @johngill2853

    2 ай бұрын

    You didn't write them off your taxes every year?

  • @robertnasser9937
    @robertnasser99372 ай бұрын

    If and when you pass, the money paid in by the person does not go to spouse or children. So say a single 60 year old passes, all of the money does not get willed, it goes into uncle Sam’s coffers

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    it does go to spouse. it is supposed to help pay for your retirement. not to buy your grown kids a boat when you die. if you want to leave money to your kids, invest some of your after tax income in a sure thing on wall street. your after tax income is considerably more than the pre tax income of workers before SS was invented (adjusted for inflation).

  • @cratecruncher4974
    @cratecruncher49742 ай бұрын

    At 6:13, she's referring to one small problem, not two.

  • @oweunuffin2252
    @oweunuffin22522 ай бұрын

    🤔my ss IS being cut by 30%. All essentials have risen by that. Inflation is a hidden tax.

  • @Satjr35031

    @Satjr35031

    2 ай бұрын

    Explain how it’s being cut.?

  • @oaktjen

    @oaktjen

    2 ай бұрын

    omg, inflation isn't up 30 percent. get a friggin grip. and you get a cola every year. when inflation is high, you get a higher cola. hyperbole only makes your point invalid. who listens, to people that spout exaggerated BS?

  • @michaelmcinnis911

    @michaelmcinnis911

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Satjr35031 he just did. Inflation makes your dollars worth less. Since you earned these dollars in previous years, they had more buying power than they do today. Social Security doesn't grow your money the way a 401K does; you never come out ahead being in the Social Security program. If more Americans understood this, they'd be storming Washington with pitchforks...

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    SS payments are adjusted for inflation.

  • @l.a.mottern3106

    @l.a.mottern3106

    2 ай бұрын

    SS is allegedly adjusted for Inflation. But never at the official or compounded rate and never has been.

  • @karencarroll4409
    @karencarroll4409Ай бұрын

    What about the people who have died before they collect where is their money gone to?..

  • @stevec404
    @stevec4042 ай бұрын

    Double taxation should never be allowed. Tax less, spend less.

  • @stephenharper6638
    @stephenharper66382 ай бұрын

    Problem: Smaller work force. Solution: Tax the robots!

  • @michaelmcinnis911
    @michaelmcinnis9112 ай бұрын

    You mentioned that part of the rationale for taxing S.S. is that half is paid by employers, so it's "tax free" for the employee. But what about those of us who are/were self-employed; we paid ALL of our S.S. tax (or, we paid a little over 92%, since there was some kind of reduction for the self-employed). Yet I never hear that we're in a different tax category because of this. Can you speak to this?

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    i think it's best to think of the SS tax as what is needed to (with interest) pay for his needs when he can no longer work. the self employed pay the whole tax. those who work for someone else pay half and the employer is required to pay the other half, because the emplyer can't be trusted to pay the worker enough for the worker to pay the whole amount.

  • @jimbrauer1711
    @jimbrauer17112 ай бұрын

    Scrap the CAP!

  • @machintelligence

    @machintelligence

    2 ай бұрын

    If you earn over 250-K you can afford to pay a bit more to Social Security.

  • @michaelmcinnis911

    @michaelmcinnis911

    2 ай бұрын

    @@machintelligence - this doesn't change the fact that Social Security doesn't earn what our money would earn in a private pension or 401K account - so the government is robbing ALL of us - but is robbing those who earn more even more, because of their hard work/industry/earning ability (whatever you want to call their hard work and ingenuity to earn a higher wage). BTW, I'm not one of them; my annual income has never been over $100K.

  • @machintelligence

    @machintelligence

    2 ай бұрын

    Social security is not just a retirement program. It is also disability insurance , survivors insurance and even includes a modest death benefit.

  • @jmmysms

    @jmmysms

    2 ай бұрын

    That is a bold statement. You have no idea what someone else's financial situation might be. Everyone wants someone else to pay more so they can get more. SMH @@machintelligence

  • @richardmelville5973
    @richardmelville59732 ай бұрын

    Raise the cap -- it is really simple. The cap has not kept up with inflation.

  • @davidgerwin7885
    @davidgerwin78852 ай бұрын

    A couple things. The "tax" on SS goes back into the SS fund not the general federal revenue where your regular income tax goes. I am a single semi retired person with an income that gave me a federal income tax of $3200. The portion of that from my SS was about $500. In previous years my income was half of this years and the portion of tax from SS was less than $100. So for the upper low end of income retired people the tax is inconsequencal. Also the fact that it goes back into the is helpful to the life of SS also.

  • @rondesombre6149
    @rondesombre61492 ай бұрын

    So un-cap on way in and don’t tax social security payments … sounds like a great idea!

  • @Satjr35031

    @Satjr35031

    2 ай бұрын

    SS by itself is non taxable if that’s your only income.

  • @sambira

    @sambira

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Satjr35031 According to what I've read, if your SS is above their limits you will get taxed. I've heard this said before but have yet to find corroborating IRS evidence of this. If you have the publication or IRS site indicating this, I'd be interested in the link so I can read it. BTW, I've always thought the same as you though.

  • @arktom7335
    @arktom73352 ай бұрын

    I'm so happy I made productive decisions about my finances that changed my life forever,hoping to retire next year.. Investment should always be on any creative man's heart for success in life

  • @Richardson238

    @Richardson238

    2 ай бұрын

    You're right, with my current crpyto portfolio made from my investments with my personal financial advisor Fergus Waylen, I totally agree with you ,

  • @Richardson238

    @Richardson238

    2 ай бұрын

    He often interacts on facebook , using the user name

  • @Richardson238

    @Richardson238

    2 ай бұрын

    Fergus waylen , that's his user name

  • @Richardson238

    @Richardson238

    2 ай бұрын

    Fergus Waylen That's his username / facebook

  • @waynes4369

    @waynes4369

    2 ай бұрын

    After I raised up to $328k trading with him I brought a new house and a car here in the states also paid for my daughter's surgery (Jane). Glory to God. Shalom .

  • @MarkMaxwell-author
    @MarkMaxwell-author2 ай бұрын

    It would seem that if the federal government repaid the nearly 3 trillion dollar it borrowed from the Social Security Trust that solvency should not be an issue?

  • @nationalzero269

    @nationalzero269

    2 ай бұрын

    Where will this money come from?

  • @MarkMaxwell-author

    @MarkMaxwell-author

    2 ай бұрын

    @@nationalzero269 maybe RR should have thought of that

  • @nationalzero269

    @nationalzero269

    2 ай бұрын

    @@MarkMaxwell-author You don't know what you are talking about.

  • @MarkMaxwell-author

    @MarkMaxwell-author

    2 ай бұрын

    @@nationalzero269 so pls 'splain us mister financial wizard how it is, all I know is the system was working incredibly well for nearly half a century before RR started borrowing from the trust and taxing retirees and handicapped.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    themoney was borrowed, and is now being paid back. standard business practice.

  • @victoriajloveland3144
    @victoriajloveland31442 ай бұрын

    We paid Railroad tier 1 and tier 2 tax while raising five kids. It was a painfully high tax rate. Now, as a Widow, I'm about to be taxed on receipt. It is over one months pay! i.e., and this is just an example, not my income. 28,000 a year, gets almost $4000 in income tax, does not qualify for medicaid, and if rent is tied to income, actually has less to live on. While someone who makes $168,000 a year only pays 10,000 in taxes. So the lower end gets hit much harder. I'm for the "You earned it you keep it act." I disagree that the poor are being taxed fairly. I'd love to live to see that happen:) These are general figures, and please correct me Holy Schmidt! I appreciate your advice.

  • @whatsup3270

    @whatsup3270

    2 ай бұрын

    Actually FICA taxes and IRS Federal Income taxes dance together. Thus if the FICA caps were totally removed the federal income tax brackets would need to be shifted to match. Simply there is no free lunch. Social security is exceptionally kind to the poor as the first "bend point" pays 90% returns.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    that's 90% of adjusted for inflation average life time income...on very low incomes. it's barely enough to live on. but that's the point. as lifetime incomes go up, the payout goes up in actual dollars, but lower percent of lifetime income. by the time you get to highest income under the cap, the payout is approx equal to what you paid in taxes..about 12% of lifetime income adjusted for inflation, and paid over 20years instead of 40years.(on average)@@whatsup3270

  • @BlazingShackles
    @BlazingShacklesАй бұрын

    Great idea. The amount Im going to get in SSA checks is not even half of what I need to live.

  • @psdaengr911
    @psdaengr9112 ай бұрын

    Unlikely to ever pass the Senate as wealtier people would pay more into Social Security. Objectively it's not a tax on a tax because the average person draws 5X more in social security payments than an average workers and their employer contributes. The tax is graduated and capped at 85% of social security based on total income.

  • @GNX157
    @GNX1572 ай бұрын

    The animation at 9:06 was impressive👍.

  • @bmiles4131

    @bmiles4131

    2 ай бұрын

    It creeped me out tho

  • @user-rf2ko8hr1n
    @user-rf2ko8hr1nАй бұрын

    before Ronnie Rregans 2nd term Social securityb was not taxed. and by the way your employer also paid in a matching amount.

  • @user-sk9lu9ou5y
    @user-sk9lu9ou5y2 ай бұрын

    I bring in $2,200 a month from SS. $400 a month goes to tax ($4,800 a year). If anyone believes $40,000 a year is "rich" today than I must be filthy rich. Between me and my wife, we make a little more than $80,000 a year. We don't have much and it's typically a struggle to make it month to month today. I won't even start about how bad it's got in just 3 years!

  • @realitywave

    @realitywave

    2 ай бұрын

    More than 80k and whining? How American.

  • @aolvaar8792

    @aolvaar8792

    2 ай бұрын

    Simple math. $40K pension + $40K SSA for wife and I, $80K combined, $40K + $20K (taxable SSA) = $60K Minus $30K Standard Deduction = $30K, $2000 + $1200 = $3200 tax If no SSA taxable>> $1000>>> $2200/yr more 😀

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    @@aolvaar8792not rich, but not desperate poverty either. it looks to me like you are probably getting exactly what you earned...minus taxes, just like the rest of us. you wish it was more, and you think that without taxes it would be more, until you looked around and found out how hard it is to make money without a country

  • @michaelwoods4495
    @michaelwoods449526 күн бұрын

    Equity, that is fairness, tells me that if the contributions are paid with money that has been taxed, benefits should be tax-free. If contributions are deductible or excluded from taxable income, benefits should be taxed. Or if employers' contributions are deductible to the employer and workers' contributions are paid with taxed income, benefits should be half-taxed. In other words, income is taxed only once. The next step by the greedy government would be to tax withdrawals from your savings accounts.

  • @sandrakendrick176
    @sandrakendrick1762 ай бұрын

    We aren’t holding our breath!

  • @elvismozie4697
    @elvismozie46972 ай бұрын

    *My greatest concern is how to recover from all these economic and global troubles and stay afloat🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻 especially with the political power tussle going on in US. The government has really called things more difficult for its citizens, and we can't sit back and bear all the consequences of the bad governance. We need to take our financial life serious... I recommend stock market investment and digital currencies*

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    the people who own the stock market are the ones causing all the trouble.

  • @JoeCosentino
    @JoeCosentino2 ай бұрын

    So they have been saying the same thing for decades. The money in the fund is not used by a large portion of people who pay in, in my family my brother passed at 63 never collected my father passed at 52 and never collected. Congress needs to stop dipping into the fund and using it for other projects

  • @rodwhitney8650
    @rodwhitney86502 ай бұрын

    I can understand the 50% taxable SS income since it hasn't been taxed, but make it all taxed or none, not depending on additional income.

  • @wurly164
    @wurly1642 ай бұрын

    Think about it, they took this money out of your paycheck for decades, they made a huge amount of interest on your money, they then give some of it back to you, and tax you on it.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    think more. the interest they made on it came back to you in benefits. they only tax benefits if you have other income that keeps you out of poverty, you get back everything you paid in plus interest...about three times what you paid in. unless you are above the cap then you get back approximately what you paid in adjusted for inflation.

  • @paulmarshall1127
    @paulmarshall11272 ай бұрын

    Holy Schmidt what is the way to fix in your opinion

  • @lawrenceconsidine9273
    @lawrenceconsidine92732 ай бұрын

    If we are double taxed can we claim the us government as a dependent?

  • @handimanjay6642
    @handimanjay66422 ай бұрын

    Lockbox what lockbox? We pay SS and Medicare taxes from every paycheck over 50 years. Apply for it and we pay taxes on SS and a monthly Medicare insurance?

  • @gailsgig
    @gailsgigАй бұрын

    The middle class now goes to 250,000. WHY DOESNT EVERYONE PAY social Security taxes up to 250,000 instead of 160,000! It is ridiculous! Many of us were SELF EMPLOYED AND PAID THE WHOLE TAX!!

  • @SandfordSmythe

    @SandfordSmythe

    Ай бұрын

    People over the cap also only get benefits up to that level. What's your problem here?

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    Ай бұрын

    the cap is there so people only pay as much as SS is worth to them. just like private insurance, you get what you pay for. the "whole tax" is what it costs to provide you with a monthly check for twenty years (on average) when you retire. employees only pay half the tax, the government makes the employer pay the other half because they have learned that otherwise the employer will not pay the worker enough to be able to retire. also, workers being human too, they would think they were paying too much if they paid the whole cost. we could trust the self employed to pay themselves enough. well, maybe not. most people think they can do better with the money than SS. but it turns out that most of them can't.

  • @stevenovotny3278
    @stevenovotny3278Ай бұрын

    Hi there question for you . I am 64 and thinking of taking SS at 67. My question is if I’m an IC how much could I earn if taking SS … again at 67 . When they factor in my earnings is it “ gross “ earnings or my AGI for each year ? Just curios TY

  • @lizs502
    @lizs5022 ай бұрын

    I sure hope it passes, I wouldn't mind paying taxes on SS if it wasn't structured in such an annoying way that a person has to have a crystal ball to know what to pay for estimated tax payments (or to have to submit an extra tax form to explain the crystal ball malfunctioned). The marginal tax rates are a horrid surprise.

  • @kayallen7603
    @kayallen7603Ай бұрын

    Good !!!

  • @2023Red
    @2023RedАй бұрын

    Excellent topic with discussion! We do not like Reagan due to WEP and GPO. About social security, two ways to fund. One is friendly to one part and the other to the other party. 1. Delay age to receive benefits. 2. Make mandatory contributions at a higher income level to make the wealthier to continue to pay into it. Since one is favorable to just one party the proper approach is to do both. I would fully support both more than just one. In fact, I believe that the taxpayers should receive a federal dividend based upon the aggregriate earnings in our GDP. Businesses do that and their stocks are referred as value investments. Each annual increase over a GDP threshold such as 3% provides a dividend credit for every taxpayer. It could be a fixed dollar amount such as $100 for every tenth of a percent over 3% GDP annual growth to any maximum level. I would also stop January automatic pay raises to the Congress and to the Senate for any drop in GDP under a set threshold for five years.

  • @SandfordSmythe

    @SandfordSmythe

    Ай бұрын

    WEP was bipartisan.

  • @2023Red

    @2023Red

    Ай бұрын

    @@SandfordSmythe WEP and WPO are both sore points for us.

  • @smallcoffee75
    @smallcoffee75Ай бұрын

    great video again

  • @SRBrown9032
    @SRBrown90322 ай бұрын

    A complicated subject well presented, thanks. I'm not sure I yet understand all the details and implications, but I have learned a bit more than I knew before. Having said that I would suggest that Social Security wouldn't have this problem or at least as much of a problem if middle and lower class wages were higher. As a retiree myself I would also say that my generation, the boomers, clocked in on "trickle-down" economics 4 decades ago and, surprise surprise, George HW Bush was right when running against Ronald Reagan in 1980 he described it as "voodoo" economics. He was right, but like any good Republican, rolled over and stayed silent when tapped for VP later that campaign season. So from then until now we have witnessed not "trickle-down", but "trickle-up" economics that has resulted in wage and wealth inequality unmatched since the gilded age of the late 19th century. We (not me personally) voted for it again and again and pretty much wrecked the economic future for our children and grandchildren. So from that perspective I'm happy to pay taxes on my Social Security benefit, it's the least I can do.

  • @ytr8989
    @ytr89892 ай бұрын

    Social security should be tax free because the money had already been taxed.

  • @captndtowboat9643
    @captndtowboat9643Ай бұрын

    Remove income cap on SS tax. Cap benefits. Put all government employees in the system. Do away with public employment retirement plans.

  • @SandfordSmythe

    @SandfordSmythe

    Ай бұрын

    Can't tell states what to do

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    Ай бұрын

    @@SandfordSmythe well SS is a federal program. but too many people have their own ideas of how to fix it that simply won't work.

  • @romanhollow2985
    @romanhollow29852 ай бұрын

    There must be some tricks or certain conditions to blow it all. I'll believe it when i see it and i won't see it.

  • @MarvinWarren-if8id
    @MarvinWarren-if8id8 күн бұрын

    I've heard various figures for the ROI of Social Security taxes. What does Holy Schmidt say?

  • @onesimusiii
    @onesimusiii2 ай бұрын

    One thing I wonder cuz not sure how it would effect the balance of funds coming into ssi is what if they raised how much you can earn if you retire early to say $100,000 so if you are still adding to the system while collecting is that a benefit to the system or does it pull it down faster if more people start drawing sooner while working.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    a little hard to follow what you are saying but the tax on benefits only applies to benefits so no matter how much you are making you would be paying your normal tax rate on only about 30k income from Social Security (plus of course your normal rate on your non-social security income.) studies i have read say srappng the cap will NOT pay for the expected shortfall caused by living longer. but raising the payroll tax about 2% at a rate of one tenth of one percent per year will.

  • @69hdavid
    @69hdavid2 ай бұрын

    Why not remove the the current cap of $168,900 for taxable income and tax all earned income?

  • @deborahcaldwell9775
    @deborahcaldwell97752 ай бұрын

    Interesting for sure

  • @marksanders1034
    @marksanders1034Ай бұрын

    The military industrial complex gets all the money, the government could care less about social security

  • @SSmith-fm9kg
    @SSmith-fm9kg2 ай бұрын

    and I want it to be retroactive back to when I went on SS. I'm 74 and still working, paying into SS.

  • @GabrielSBarbaraS
    @GabrielSBarbaraS2 ай бұрын

    I want to believe we are paying taxes on the growth and what the companies we worked for contributed. Does the last in, first out rule apply here?

  • @livingontheedge8680

    @livingontheedge8680

    2 ай бұрын

    SS taxes are payments on government waste.

  • @lildpropmsv
    @lildpropmsv2 ай бұрын

    It would seem that the most important part of this video presentation was at the end when he said that SS won't get fixed until the last second before it crashes, therefore, not until 2034. But maybe congress will do something now???? In fact, since Republicans always want to reduce taxes, they should be in favor of passing it. And Democrats like helping the poor and middle class so they should be in favor of passing it....that definitely tells me it has NO chance of passing since neither side wants to do ANYTHING the other side wants! We are doomed! LOL!

  • @Charles.P17896
    @Charles.P178962 ай бұрын

    If in 1983 they fixed it with three months to spare, I don't believe they will provide a fix anytime soon.

  • @marianrosin6486

    @marianrosin6486

    2 ай бұрын

    Reagan did that to cover his enormous tax breaks for the wealthy. Calling him a jerk is being polite.

  • @scootertooter6874

    @scootertooter6874

    2 ай бұрын

    Good point. Tell me politicians were just f*cked up then as now...

  • @johngill2853

    @johngill2853

    2 ай бұрын

    That's only because the voters can't agree on what they want. How do you pass any legislation without making somebody mad. The problem is us we all want something different to fix Social Security

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    exactly, it would be cheaper to fix it now by raising the tax one tenth of one percent per year, about one dollar per week per year. but the people are fooled into all kinds of dumb ideas about SS.@@johngill2853

  • @alittletexasingeorgia
    @alittletexasingeorgia2 ай бұрын

    What about making Congress pay back all the money they have borrowed from Social Security over the years first. Of course that would mean cutting a lot of other political backroom fat thrown in the budget over time.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    congress is paying back the money as intended.

  • @patrickruvolo8427
    @patrickruvolo8427Ай бұрын

    I had to match my SS FOR BEING SELF-EMPLOYED. WE ARE JUST HAMMERED BY THIS

  • @JustVisiting
    @JustVisiting2 ай бұрын

    Remove the cap on earnings that are taxed for Social Security. Problem solved.

  • @SandfordSmythe

    @SandfordSmythe

    Ай бұрын

    And then pay out more money.

  • @termita358
    @termita3582 ай бұрын

    I like this a lot. Not perfect, but much better than doing nothing.

  • @RB-hl3ux
    @RB-hl3ux2 ай бұрын

    Thanks for commenting on this, I hope the bill passes it’s not fair that we are paying double taxes on our money when we need it the most in our older years 😮

  • @user-gt6df7qi3n
    @user-gt6df7qi3n2 ай бұрын

    Social Security income was created to support seniors in their retirement not to support government. Social Security has turned into a Ponzi scheme because person never gets to spend as they see fit. The money is taxed an goes back to the government instead of to the people that have paid into for decades. Social Security income even with raises has never kept up with inflation. As an example compared to last year my homeowners insurance increased by 170% and my car insurance increased by 23%. I have no insurance claims. The small raise in benefits did not cover these higher costs therefore my standard of living keeps going down. It is time to stop taxing Social Security income.

  • @user-os1tm3te3f

    @user-os1tm3te3f

    2 ай бұрын

    it always keeps up with inflation. that's a big part of how it works.

  • @johnnyretires
    @johnnyretires2 ай бұрын

    Removing SS from my AGI has implications for Roth conversions. Need something more definitive than maybe a no tax on SS

  • @steveolive9991
    @steveolive99912 ай бұрын

    If Congress ever did cut social security benefits, all those representatives and senators would lose their phoney baloney jobs.

  • @ppen62
    @ppen62Ай бұрын

    And that just what it is a discussion. Heard this supposed bill last year and here it is 2024 talking about it again. You work your but off x amount of years. While paying taxes just to be able to reach retirement to pay taxes on money. You done already been tax for while working to be tax on the money you not working for that you earn. That the one thing nobody tells you when you working. Now they want to raise the retirement age again up 70 or higher. Because they see some individuals are living up to a 90 to 100 or more. What so funny they can finds ways to cancel or cut government college tuition loans but have no problem screwing over older Americans. Who honestly work hard to reach retirement.