2008 OASDI Trustees Report

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C. PROGRAM-SPECIFIC ASSUMPTIONS AND METHODS
The demographic and economic assumptions and methods described in the previous sections are used in a set of models to project future income and cost under the OASDI program. In some cases, the economic assumptions result in the direct calculation of program parameters as described in the fol­lowing subsection. These parameters affect the level of payroll taxes col­lected and the level of benefits paid and are calculated using formulas described explicitly in the Social Security Act. In other cases, the combina­tion of demographic and economic assumptions are used indirectly to drive more complicated models that project the numbers of future workers covered under OASDI and the levels of their covered earnings, and the numbers of future beneficiaries and the expected levels of their benefits. The following subsections provide brief descriptions of the derivations of these program-specific factors.
1. Automatically Adjusted Program Parameters
The Social Security Act specifies that certain program parameters affecting the determination of OASDI benefits and taxes are to be adjusted annually, reflecting changes in particular economic measures. The law prescribes spe­cific formulas that, when applied to reported statistics, produce automatic revisions in these program parameters and hence in the benefit and tax com­putations. These automatic adjustments are based on measured changes in the national average wage index (AWI) and the CPI.1 In this section, values are shown for program parameters that are subject to automatic adjustment, from the time that such adjustments became effective through 2017. Pro­jected values for future years are based on the economic assumptions described in the preceding section of this report.
The following two tables present the historical and projected values of the CPI-based benefit increases, as well as the AWI series and the values of many of the wage-indexed program parameters. In each table, the projections are shown under the three alternative sets of economic assumptions described in the previous section. Table V.C1 includes:
The annual percentage increases which have been applied to OASDI benefits under automatic cost-of-living adjustment provisions in the Social Security Act, based on increases in the CPI.
The annual levels of and percentage increases in the AWI. Under sec­tion 215(b)(3) of the Social Security Act, the AWI for each year after 1950 is used to index the taxable earnings of most workers first becom­ing eligible for benefits in 1979 or later. This procedure converts a worker’s past earnings to approximately benefit equivalent values near the time of the worker’s benefit eligibility, and these indexed values are used to calculate the worker’s benefit amount. The AWI is also used to adjust most of the other program parameters that are subject to the auto­matic-adjustment provisions.
The wage-indexed OASDI contribution and benefit base—the maxi­mum amount of earnings for the specified year that are subject to the OASDI payroll tax and creditable toward benefit computation.
The wage-indexed retirement earnings test exempt amounts—the annual amount of earnings below which beneficiaries are not subject to benefit withholding. A lower exempt amount applies in years before a beneficiary attains normal retirement age (NRA). A higher amount applies for the year in which the beneficiary attains normal retirement age. The retirement test does not apply beginning with the attainment of normal retirement age.
 
Table V.C1.—Cost-of-Living Benefit Increases, Average Wage Index, Contribution and Benefit Bases, and Retirement Earnings Test Exempt Amounts, 1975-2017 
OASDI
benefit
increases1
(percent)
Average
wage index (AWI) 2
OASDI
contribution
and benefit
base 3
Retirement earnings
test exempt amount
Increase
(percent)