I don’t think there is an earlier option for less money anymore but could be wrong.

  • MrJameGumb@lemmy.world
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    At this point I’m just assuming that by the time I’m “retirement age” there won’t be any social security anymore, and I’ll just have to keep working until the day I either drop dead or win the lottery

    • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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      Even if social security was still paying out it’s not like you could retire on it anyway. You need a lot more.

    • EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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      Start an IRA and put a few bucks a month in to buy shares of a mutual fund. Every penny you can invest in retirement will pay off when you do retire, and the sooner you can start, the better.

      • Anamnesis@lemmy.world
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        No average year of IRA return will beat the 6.8% interest or more that a lot of us are paying on student loans debt.

        • EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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          Over the lifetime of the investment account, it should outperform the interest you’re paying. You don’t want to track your retirement investments from year to year since the market constantly fluctuates, but it’ll still trend up 6-9%.

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    men’s life expectancy is only 77 now

    That figure is average life expectancy. IE 50% of US man are expected to reach 77.

    A bit of history on why 65 was originally set as the retirement age.

    The first country to set retirement at 65 was the Weimar Republic in Germany (1918-1933).

    The reason 65 was chosen was that at that time only 5% (1 in 20) of the German population made it to 65. Retirement and the pension was a case of “You have worked hard all you life and will die soon, this is to let your final years be a bit easy”

    Over the last century, in the west at least, over average lifespan has increased markedly and the quality of life for people of advanced age has also increased.

    Many government now face the issue that they cannot afford to keep paying retirement benefits for two reasons:

    1: Many many more people are reaching retirement age and they are living for decades more, rather than a few years.

    2: With the decline in birthrates the ratio of working people to those in retirement has changed from about 10 to 1 to about 5 to 1 and is expected to get worse in the decades to come.

    This does not answer your question but gives you an idea of the issues and hard decisions societies will have to face in the coming decades.

      • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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        In the US, social security is a tax on poor people earning less than~$160k. That’s the bottom 90% of earners.

        The top 10% of earners collect about half of the country’s personal income. Each of them does have to pay SS tax on the first $160k of earned income, but clearly there’s a huge pool of income that doesn’t pay into social security.

        • Nurgle@lemmy.world
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          To that point SS is fully funded till about 2035 and then can pay out approx 75% of benefits after that. Removing that $160K cap would pretty much solve things.

    • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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      That figure is average life expectancy. IE 50% of US man are expected to reach 77.

      I can’t access the full paper that this is in reference too, so I’m not sure how they calculate it… but isn’t life expectancy usually the mean age of death? I would expect the distribution to have a left skew from people who die young, which should mean that more than 50% of US men are expected to reach 77.

      • driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br
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        Take a life table, check the column that says lx, that means how many people of the model are alive with x years, normally l_0 = 10000. Then go down until you found lx = 5000 or lx = 1/2 l_0, that x is your life expectancy at birth. If you want to know the life expectancy at any age, look for the value of lx at that age, then look in how many years that value half, that’s the expectancy. Source: I’m an actuarie and study that in college, but don’t ask me to go deeper because I don’t use that at my job.

        I was wrong.

        • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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          That marks the median age of death, but I don’t think that’s the definition of life expectancy (though maybe the term is used loosely or imprecisely to mean the median age of death or the average (mean) age of death in different situations…). The definitions of life expectancy I found claim it’s the mean age of death, which would make sense because the expected value of a random variable is the arithmetic mean. That said, the median on the life tables that I have found seem to correlate much more closely to the age of 77 versus the life expectancy at birth which is much lower (78-79 for the median and 74 for the life expectancy at birth for 2020 data)… but the actual paper is behind a pay wall so I have no idea what they’re actually computing for 77 years of life expectancy… my guess is that it’s the median and not the mean, but maybe they’re considering people over a certain age or something… either way, the mean / median getting confused is an issue and I wish people were more clear about what metric is actually being communicated.

        • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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          Okay, I couldn’t look at this table when I responded last night (I thought you were referring to the zip files, not the PDFs at the bottom). Got a chance to look at them on my computer today!

          Would you call the point where I_x = 1/2 I_0 the life expectancy at birth? In the life tables you link to (direct link to the 2020 table) there’s an “expectation of life at age x” column which differs! My understanding is that in official metrics of “life expectancy” they usually mean the “life expectancy at birth”, which is calculated in the “expectation of life at age x” column in this data set, do actuaries use a different definition?

          In this table “life expectancy at birth” is estimated at 74.2 for men in the USA in 2020. This is calculated in this table by computing T_0 / I_0, which is the arithmetic mean for the ages of death in this period. The estimate for the median age of death in this table is between the ages of 79 and 80. There’s about a 5 year difference between these two numbers, and furthermore only about 40% of the population of men has died by the ages of 74-75 in this table, which is quite different from 50% if we assume “life expectancy” is this arithmetic mean. These are pretty big differences, and I really wish people / articles would be more clear about how the number they’re quoting was actually calculated and what it means! The estimated median age of death from the point I_x = 1/2 I_0 is a useful measure too, but I have no idea what a random person or article intends when they say “life expectancy” :|. I’ve grown to deeply distrust any aggregate measure that people discuss informally or in news articles… It’s often very unclear how that number was derived, what that number actually means in a mathematical sense, and if it even means anything at all.

          • driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br
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            I think im going crazy because I was sure that the ex was the easily calculated as I told before, but I just checked a couple of different mortality tables and the math doesn’t check out. I have no worked with life tables since college, but I’m going to ask my boss, that used to work with life insurance, about it tomorrow and follow up with his answer.

          • driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br
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            I just talked to my boss and he didn’t knew where the fuck I learned that because it had no sense. Maybe I saw some wicked up life tables where for some reason it worked like that. The formula is sum(i=x,w) l_i /l_x, that means (l_x + l_x+1 + … + l_w) / l_x, where w is the maximum life of the table.

      • Pons_Aelius@kbin.social
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        average life expectancy

        mean age of death?

        To me mean = average, so the two statements are the same.

        Are you talking about median age of death?

        When child mortality was very high (pre- 20 century) that was definitely the case. I am not so sure that it is now. I feel that average life expectancy will be a lot closer to 50% survival rate (median age of death) than it was in the past.

        • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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          To me mean = average, so the two statements are the same.

          Are you talking about median age of death?

          The median is the midpoint of a sample, not the mean. So, the median point represents the age where 50% of people will live to, the mean does not represent that (it’s often relatively close to the median assuming the data doesn’t have too much skew, but it can be way off).

          When child mortality was very high (pre- 20 century) that was definitely the case. I am not so sure that it is now. I feel that average life expectancy will be a lot closer to 50% survival rate (median age of death) than it was in the past.

          There are still plenty of people who die young, even though child mortality is less of a factor in wealthy countries right now. Plenty of people die in car accidents at a relatively young age, for instance. I’m sure the median and mean aren’t like 10 years off of each other, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re 3 or even 5 years off, which could be pretty significant in this context.

          • Pons_Aelius@kbin.social
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            Well, both of us are making assumptions without doing the research.

            So. I respect your opinion but neither of us knows that we are actually correct.

            • Chobbes@lemmy.world
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              Well, the definition of the mean and median of a sample doesn’t depend on the particular data set, and there’s plenty of non-age related causes of death in the world which would logically skew the distribution to the left! You can look at actuarial tables to see this in action:

              https://www.ssa.gov/oact/STATS/table4c6.html

              Male life expectancy at birth in this table is 74.12, but you’ll notice that you don’t get to 50% of the population dying until somewhere between the ages of 78 and 79.

              This website has a pretty good chart showing the skew for a 2019 dataset:

  • originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com
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    should it be 70? fuck no. its goin the wrong direction thanks to rampant, unrestrained capitalism and lack of taxes.

    that said, the last thing im thinkin is ‘i hope i get all mine’

    no one is askin if the military will get funded… there actually isnt much difference here

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    Where are you getting the 70 years old number combined with the “have to wait until” logic?

    In the USA you can start taking Social Security at as young as 62, with most waiting until 67 for full benefits. The only folks waiting until 70 are those that want even MORE than the full benefit.

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        If the pattern follows from the last age raise (from 65 to 67) then the people that will be affected by an “age 70 for full benefits” may not even be born yet. The last age raise started in 1983 and just came into full effect in 2022 (for only a 2 year age increase).

        source

    • corgi@lemmy.world
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      They don’t expect to go bankrupt by 2033. That’s when the surplus/reserves will run out. The system doesn’t have the fixed amount of money. Current employees are constantly paying into it.

      20% is the shortfall between payout vs people paying in. And it will only happen if it’s not addressed. Which I’m sure will get addressed last minute or something like that.

  • Beej Jorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org
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    You can start collecting at 62 and get 70% of your computed payout, which I will be doing.

    The math is too hard for me given inflation and all that, but since social security rarely seems to have enough money, I’d guess they’re still paying out more than they take in…?

    • tburkhol@lemmy.world
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      If you make it to 62, your life expectancy is 21 more years. that mean 21*0.7 = 14.7 years worth of social security payments. Full benefit at age 67 gets you 16 years worth of payments. If they’d raise full retirement age to 70, you’d only collect 13 years of payments.

    • LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world
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      I’ve been coached into waiting until age 70 to get 100% of the payout. If you cash in at age 62, even once you hit 70 you’ll still be getting 70% of your payout. Could you bear to wait eight more years for the 100%? You’ve already waited 62 years! What’s 8 more?

      • thisisawayoflife@lemmy.world
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        8 years is a long time and cancer can kill you in two, especially if you don’t have good doctors and they don’t catch that it metastasized already. Ask me how I know.

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        Could you bear to wait eight more years for the 100%? You’ve already waited 62 years! What’s 8 more?

        It’s easy to think that way in your younger years. That’s a much more difficult request for people actually in their 60’s, lots of people make it to that age with broken down bodies, various illnesses/prescriptions/whatnot & probably can’t see themselves continuing to do the work thing throughout their 60’s let alone 70.

        There’s also the problem of holding down a job at that age, ageism exists in a lot of industries so a lot of these people are first in line for layoffs / taking a massive pay cut from their earlier jobs vs being a Walmart greeter or just being unemployed.

        But sure… in theory if you manage to stay fit & healthy well into your old age & are able to hold onto your normal job then sure working into your 70’s or more could be plausible. People probably worry less about that stuff once they’re higher up on the corporate ladder - though at that point they should already have fat 401K plans & other investments so the social security aspect becomes less relevant.

        • EatYouWell@lemmy.world
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          Just wanted to chime in and say that everyone should start investing in their retirement as early as possible. Even if it’s just a few bucks a month, it’ll make a big difference down the road.

      • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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        My dad waited until 70, and then by age 72 began a severe decline in health which eventually saw him homebound with a feeding tube, only leaving the house for doc appts or trips to the ER. I am quite certain if he had a do-over he would have retired earlier and enjoyed his 60s instead of working at his boring job.

        I think if you reach 62 and you’re gainfully employed and truly enjoy what you do, there’s nothing wrong with holding out for more benefits. But if you are able to retire earlier, I can’t recommend continuing to spend your days doing work you don’t enjoy because “what’s 8 more years”. Those 8 years could be your big chance to enjoy the fruits of your labor.

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    Don’t watch kurzgesagt’s video on “South Korea”* getting older, if you don’t want to know the awful answer to that.

    People will have and get social security paid. But the environment wars and mass immigration will be the answer, which means you’ll be looking at 20 years of conservatives bitching and whining.

    Want to avoid it on a personal level? Emigrate to north europe. Sad, but it is what it is.

    * video is more general than that. But they used korea as the clickbait.

      • Rocky60@lemm.ee
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        I get $2,177 a month at 62, $2,681 at 65 (Medicare age), and $3,836 at 70. I also have a pension, and a 401K. There is an incentive to work longer, but I don’t need to. Most of the people I work with retire around 65.

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    I don’t think there is an earlier option for less money

    Sure there is, go to the SSA website itself the earliest eligibility is 62

    https://www.ssa.gov/retirement/eligibility

    You can also register yourself there & see your own estimates based on when you expect to claim social security.

  • FReddit@lemmy.world
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    You really need a Vegas odds maker and and epigenetics expert to figure the over and under.

    I’m 62 I’m hoping to work to 65-70 to get as much as I can before I kick the bucket.

  • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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    I expect the issue will need to get addressed in the future, especially as the wave of millennials retiring will be far worse than the boomer wave.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if it gets combined with a change in qualification age for Medicare. You push Social Security age qualifications up but push Medicare down to put the added healthcare costs on the Federal Government instead of the states. It would likely involve a slow ratchet up rather than an immediate jump. I can also see the deal include ditching the social security tax cap, or maybe adding a new tier.

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    Average life expectancy at birth is 77, because of people dying along the way for various reasons. Life expectancy at 65 is 83. The average person who makes it until 65 will live until 83