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Are Your Social Security Tax Payments Fair?

<p>Social security provides an invaluable source of income for millions of retired Americans&comma; and the future you may very well rely heavily on the program you are paying into&comma; little by little&comma; with every paycheck&period; However&comma; what if your social security payments aren&&num;8217&semi;t so little&quest; What of the cases in which they have grown to an amount that&comma; simply put&comma; just doesn&&num;8217&semi;t seem fair&quest; Here are some things to consider&colon;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Humble beginnings&period;<&sol;strong> When the social security program first took root in 1937&comma; employee contributions were extremely small&&num;8211&semi;only one percent of their income&comma; to be exact&period; Employers were required to match that one percent&comma; making a total of two percent&period; Additionally&comma; there was a cap to how much salary could be taxed for social security&period; The maximum amount of income that could be taxed&comma; for anyone&comma; was &dollar;3000&period; Therefore&comma; the maximum amount of social security payments any one person could make per year was a very modest &dollar;30&period;<&excl;--more--><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Social security payments today&period;<&sol;strong> Over the decades&comma; employee contributions to social security have gradually increased&&num;8211&semi;some say to the point that they&&num;8217&semi;re now excessive&period; Today&comma; the government siphons 6&period;2 percent of every paycheck into the social security program&comma; and the taxable salary cap amount is up to &dollar;113&comma;700&period; This equates to roughly &dollar;7050 annually in social security payments&comma; a startling increase from 1937&&num;8217&semi;s humble &dollar;30 amount&comma; to the tune of nearly 235 percent&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>Why such an increase&quest;<&sol;strong> One of the biggest reasons the government has had to increase the social security tax to such an extent is that today&&num;8217&semi;s demographics are much different than in previous decade&period; Today&comma; there are 2&period;9 workers &lpar;or social security tax payers&rpar; for every one person who is receiving social security benefits&period; Back when the social security program was new&comma; there were 159&period;4 social security tax payers for each person receiving benefits&period; There are simply many more retired people to support today than there were decades ago&comma; and American employees &lpar;as well as the companies that employee them&rpar; must carry that burden&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><strong>What does the future hold&quest;<&sol;strong> Unfortunately&comma; the demographics will only continue to change for the worse&comma; in terms of retiree to worker ratio&period; It seems inevitable that social security taxes will have to go up and&sol;or the salary tax limit will have to be increased accordingly&period; However&comma; some lawmakers are lobbying to lower social security benefit amounts&comma; instead&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It appears that there really is no clear answer in regards to whether or not social security payments are fair&period; What it comes down to is whether or not the American taxpayers should be forced into surrendering so much of their income for the social security program&comma; and this is an issue that has been dividing Americans for many years&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Did you finish filing your taxes for 2012&quest; If not&comma; click here to learn more about extensions and forms&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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