We Need to Expand the Most Effective Anti-Poverty Program in America

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BillMoyers.com is proud to collaborate with TalkPoverty.org as we focus on poverty coverage over the next two weeks. Every day, visit BillMoyers.com to discover a new action you can take to help turn the tide in the fight against poverty.

Allen Robinson, left, and his wife Nancy King Robinson pose for a portrait in their store, Books and Other Found Things, in Leesburg, Va., on Monday, Oct. 8, 2012. King Robinson has multiple sclerosis and receives Social Security disability. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Allen Robinson, left, and his wife Nancy King Robinson pose for a portrait in their store, Books and Other Found Things, in Leesburg, Va., on Monday, Oct. 8, 2012. King Robinson has multiple sclerosis and receives Social Security disability. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

In order to fight poverty, one of the easiest and most effective things we can do is to expand our Social Security system. Social Security lifted 22 million Americans out of poverty in 2012, including one million children. Without Social Security, 44.1 percent of all Americans over the age of 65 would be living in poverty; with Social Security that rate is 8.9 percent.

Social Security works — we pay into it during our working lives and it is there for us when we need it.
Social Security isn’t just for seniors – it is also the primary disability and life insurance protection for most of America’s workers. Social Security provides around $580,000 in disability insurance protections and $550,000 in life insurance protections.

Social Security Disability Insurance (DI) benefits nearly nine million Americans with disabilities and provides 75 percent or more of income for nearly six in 10 non-institutionalized beneficiaries, keeping millions of Americans with disabilities out of poverty. Nonetheless, one in five DI beneficiaries remains in poverty.

And Social Security is the nation’s largest and most generous children’s program. Nearly 10 million children either receive benefits directly as survivors of a deceased parent, or live in households where all or part of the income of the household comes from Social Security.

Social Security does all of this with relatively modest benefits — in 2013 the average individual benefit was $14,006. That is why Americans overwhelmingly believe that benefits should be expanded, and we should pay for it by asking millionaires and billionaires to pay the same rate into Social Security as everyone else, which is currently not the case.

Social Security works — we pay into it during our working lives and it is there for us when we need it. Now is the time to expand it, not to reduce benefits as too many folks in Washington are now proposing. You can read our specific plan to do just that in our new book, Social Security Works!: Why Social Security Isn’t Going Broke and How Expanding It Will Help Us All.

The views expressed in this post are the author’s alone, and presented here to offer a variety of perspectives to our readers.

Alex Lawson
Alex Lawson is the executive director of Social Security Works, part of the Strengthen Social Security Coalition, which is made up of over 320 national and state organizations representing 50 million Americans. (Photo credit: Sam Levitan)
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