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January 10, 2012
Raising the ages at which people can collect Medicare and Social Security would reduce federal spending and increase federal revenues by inducing some people to work longer. However, raising the eligibility ages for those programs also would reduce people's lifetime Social Security benefits and cause many of the people who would otherwise have enrolled in Medicare to face higher premiums for health insurance, higher out-of-pocket costs for health care, or both. This issue brief reviews how ages of eligibility affect beneficiaries under current law and how delaying eligibility would affect beneficiaries, the federal budget, and the economy.
Among CBO's findings:
Policy Option |
Long-Term Budget Impact |
Implications for Beneficiaries |
Raise the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 67 |
Medicare spending declines by about 5 percent |
Access to Medicare would be delayed for most people; many of the affected people would pay more for health care |
Raise the full retirement age for Social Security from 67 to 70 |
Social Security spending declines by about 13 percent |
People would face reduced benefits over a lifetime |
Raise the early eligibility age for Social Security from 62 to 64 |
Social Security spending changes little |
Access to Social Security benefits would be delayed for many people, but their monthly benefit amounts would increase |
By inducing people to work longer, raising any of the ages of eligibility would increase the size of the workforce and the economy. Although the magnitude of those effects is difficult to predict, CBO estimates that: