Rupp Kalman, Strand Alexander, Davies Paul, Sears Jim
Division of Policy Evaluation, Office of Research, Evaluation, and Statistics, Social Security Administration, USA.
Soc Secur Bull. 2007;67(3):29-51.
Both target effectiveness and administrative simplicity are desirable properties in the design of minimum benefit packages for public retirement programs. The federal benefit rate (FBR) of the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program has been proposed by some analysts as a potentially attractive basis of establishing a new minimum benefit for Social Security on both of these grounds. This type of proposal is related to a broader array of minimum benefit proposals that would establish a Social Security benefit floor based on the poverty rate. In contrast to Social Security, the SSI program is means tested, including both an income and asset screen and also a categorical eligibility screen (the requirement to qualify as aged or disabled). The SSI FBR provides an inflation-adjusted, guaranteed income floor for aged and disabled people with low assets. The FBR has been perceived by proponents as a minimal measure of Social Security benefit adequacy because it represents a subpoverty income level for a family of one or two depending on marital status. For this same reason it has been seen as a target-effective tool of designing a minimum Social Security benefit. An FBR-based minimum benefit has also been viewed as administratively simple to implement; the benefit can be calculated from Social Security administrative records using a completely automated electronic process. Therefore-in contrast to the SSI program itself-an FBR-based minimum benefit would incur virtually no ongoing administrative costs, would not require a separate application for a means-tested program, and would avoid the perception of welfare stigma. While these ideas have been discussed in the literature and among policymakers in the United States over the years, and similar proposals have been considered or implemented in several foreign countries, there have been no previous analyses measuring the size of the potentially affected beneficiary population. Nor has there been any systematic assessment of the FBR as a measure of benefit adequacy or the tradeoffs between potential target effectiveness and administrative simplicity. Based on a series of simulations, we assess the FBR as a potential foundation for minimum Social Security benefits and we examine the tradeoffs between administrative simplicity and target effectiveness using microdata from the 1996 panel of the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP). Our empirical analysis is limited to Social Security retired-worker beneficiaries aged 65 or older. We start with the assessment of the FBR as a measure of benefit adequacy. We are particularly concerned about two types of error: (1) incorrectly identifying some Social Security beneficiaries as "economically vulnerable," and (2) incorrectly identifying others as "not economically vulnerable." Operationally we measure economic vulnerability by two alternative standards. One of our measures considers beneficiaries with family income below the official poverty threshold as vulnerable. Our second measure is more restrictive; it uses a family income threshold equal to 75 percent of the official poverty threshold. We find that a substantial minority of retired workers have Social Security benefits below the FBR. The results also show that the FBR-based measure of Social Security benefit adequacy is very imprecise in terms of identifying economically vulnerable people. We estimate that the vast majority of beneficiaries with Social Security benefits below the FBR are not economically vulnerable. Conversely, an FBR-level Social Security benefit threshold fails to identify some beneficiaries who are economically vulnerable. Thus an FBR-level minimum benefit would be poorly targeted in terms of both types of errors we are concerned about. An FBR-level minimum benefit would provide minimum Social Security benefits to many people who are clearly not poor. Conversely, an FBR-level minimum benefit would not provide any income relief to some who are poor. The administrative simplicity behind these screening errors also results in additional program cost that may be perceived as substantial. We estimate that an FBR-level minimum benefit would increase aggregate program cost for retired workers aged 65 or older by roughly 2 percent. There are two fundamental reasons for these findings. First, the concept of an FBR-level minimum benefit looks at the individual or married couple in artificial isolation; however, the family is the main consumption unit in our society. The income of an unmarried partner or family members other than a married spouse is ignored. Second, individuals and couples may also have income from sources other than Social Security or SSI, which is also ignored by a simple FBR-based minimum benefit concept. The substantial empirical magnitude of measurement error arising from these conceptual simplifications naturally leads to the assessment of the tradeoff between target effectiveness and administrative simplicity. To facilitate this analysis, we simulate the potential effect of alternative screening methods designed to increase target effectiveness; while reducing program cost, such alternatives also may increase administrative complexity. For example, considering the combined Social Security benefit of a married couple (rather than looking at the husband and wife in isolation) might substantially increase target effectiveness with a relatively small increase in administrative complexity. Adding a family income screen might increase administrative complexity to a greater degree, but also would increase target effectiveness dramatically. The results also suggest that at some point adding new screens-such as a comprehensive asset test-may drastically increase administrative complexity with diminishing returns in terms of increased target effectiveness and reduced program cost. Whether a broad-based minimum benefit concept that is not tied to previous work experience is perceived by policymakers as desirable or not may depend on several factors not addressed in this article. However, to the extent that this type of minimum benefit design is regarded as potentially desirable, the tradeoffs between administrative simplicity and target effectiveness need to be considered.
在设计公共退休计划的最低福利套餐时,目标有效性和管理简便性都是理想的特性。一些分析人士提议,补充保障收入(SSI)计划的联邦福利率(FBR)基于这两个理由,有可能成为为社会保障设立新的最低福利的有吸引力的基础。这类提议与更广泛的一系列最低福利提议相关,这些提议将基于贫困率设立社会保障福利下限。与社会保障不同,SSI计划是经过经济状况调查的,包括收入和资产审查以及类别资格审查(要求符合老年人或残疾人资格)。SSI的FBR为资产较少的老年人和残疾人提供了经通胀调整的有保障的收入下限。支持者认为FBR是衡量社会保障福利充足性的最低标准,因为根据婚姻状况,它代表了一两个人家庭的次贫困收入水平。出于同样的原因,它被视为设计最低社会保障福利的目标有效工具。基于FBR的最低福利也被视为在管理上易于实施;可以使用完全自动化的电子流程从社会保障行政记录中计算福利。因此,与SSI计划本身不同,基于FBR的最低福利几乎不会产生持续的行政成本,不需要单独申请经济状况调查计划,并且可以避免福利污名化的看法。多年来,虽然这些想法在美国的文献和政策制定者中进行了讨论,并且几个外国也考虑或实施了类似的提议,但以前没有分析衡量可能受影响的受益人群的规模。也没有对FBR作为福利充足性的衡量标准或潜在目标有效性与管理简便性之间的权衡进行任何系统评估。基于一系列模拟,我们评估FBR作为最低社会保障福利的潜在基础,并使用1996年收入和项目参与调查(SIPP)面板的微观数据研究管理简便性与目标有效性之间的权衡。我们的实证分析仅限于65岁及以上的社会保障退休工人受益人。我们首先评估FBR作为福利充足性的衡量标准。我们特别关注两种类型的错误:(1)错误地将一些社会保障受益人识别为“经济上脆弱的”,以及(2)错误地将其他一些人识别为“经济上不脆弱的”。在操作上,我们通过两种替代标准衡量经济脆弱性。我们的一种衡量方法将家庭收入低于官方贫困线的受益人视为脆弱人群。我们的第二种衡量方法更具限制性;它使用等于官方贫困线75%的家庭收入门槛。我们发现相当一部分退休工人的社会保障福利低于FBR。结果还表明,基于FBR的社会保障福利充足性衡量标准在识别经济上脆弱的人群方面非常不准确。我们估计,社会保障福利低于FBR的绝大多数受益人在经济上并不脆弱。相反,FBR水平的社会保障福利门槛未能识别出一些经济上脆弱的受益人。因此,就我们所关注的两种错误类型而言,FBR水平的最低福利目标定位不佳。FBR水平的最低福利将为许多显然不贫困的人提供最低社会保障福利。相反,FBR水平的最低福利不会为一些贫困人口提供任何收入救济。这些筛选错误背后的管理简便性也会导致额外的项目成本,这可能被认为是相当大的。我们估计,FBR水平的最低福利将使65岁及以上退休工人的总项目成本增加约2%。这些发现有两个基本原因。首先,FBR水平最低福利的概念将个人或已婚夫妇孤立地看待;然而,家庭是我们社会的主要消费单位。未婚伴侣或已婚配偶以外家庭成员的收入被忽略。其次,个人和夫妇也可能有社会保障或SSI以外的其他收入来源,基于FBR的简单最低福利概念也忽略了这些收入。这些概念简化产生的测量误差的实际程度自然导致对目标有效性与管理简便性之间权衡的评估。为了便于这种分析,我们模拟旨在提高目标有效性的替代筛选方法的潜在效果;虽然降低项目成本,但这些替代方法也可能增加管理复杂性。例如,考虑已婚夫妇的综合社会保障福利(而不是孤立地看待丈夫和妻子)可能会在管理复杂性相对较小增加的情况下大幅提高目标有效性。增加家庭收入筛选可能会在更大程度上增加管理复杂性,但也会显著提高目标有效性。结果还表明,在某个时候增加新的筛选标准——如全面资产测试——可能会大幅增加管理复杂性,而在提高目标有效性和降低项目成本方面的回报递减。政策制定者是否认为与以前的工作经历无关的广泛最低福利概念是可取的,可能取决于本文未涉及的几个因素。然而,就这种类型的最低福利设计被视为潜在可取的程度而言,需要考虑管理简便性与目标有效性之间的权衡。