The interim report of President Bush's Commission to Strengthen Social Security clearly identifies the enormous financial problems facing Social Security. Without significant changes in the way the program is financed, substantial tax increases, benefit reductions, cuts in other government programs, or increases in publicly held debt will have to occur. According to the Commission, payroll taxes for a couple earning $50,000 per year would have to increase by 37 percent in 2040 in order to cover promised benefits.
Although Americans are increasingly aware of Social Security's financial problems, they are far less knowledgeable about who pays for, and who benefits from, the Old-Age and Survivors and Disability Insurance (OASDI) programs. Many workers do not realize that their pay stubs report only half of the Social Security taxes they actually pay. Far fewer Americans know that different groups of workers pay different average effective OASDI tax rates depending on their age, income, and other demographic characteristics. It is particularly important for policymakers to understand these differences in order to make knowledgeable decisions regarding Social Security reform.
Since 1935, Social Security has been portrayed as a national pension fund to which Americans contribute when they are working and from which they receive benefits when they retire. The reality is different. Social Security is managed as a pay-as-you-go income transfer program. In any given year, workers pay taxes on their wage and salary income and that tax revenue is immediately paid out to retired beneficiaries. Therefore, it is important to analyze who pays Social Security taxes so that policymakers and the public understand the consequences of Social Security reform on the average effective tax rates that various groups would pay.
For example, if policymakers consider resolving the system's financial challenges by increasing payroll taxes, they should know exactly who will be affected by that decision: the income, age, ethnic, educational, occupational, and family characteristics of those workers upon whom the new taxes would be levied. Increasing taxes may further reduce the capability of some covered workers to save, invest, and build wealth for their families. Unfortunately, the current debate on reforming Social Security is filled with conflicting and confusing information about who pays the payroll tax.
Policymakers also should know how tax and benefits changes would affect the income dynamics of the Social Security system. In any given year, Social Security transfers tens of billions of dollars between different groups of individuals and families. If policymakers decide to increase OASDI taxes in order to maintain benefits, they should know what impact that decision would have on the redistribution of income.
This Report is a reissue of "Who Pays the Payroll Tax?" published by the Heritage Foundation Center for Data Analysis on March 3, 2000. It is being republished to contribute to the deliberations of the President's Commission to Strengthen Social Security and the current Social Security debate. The Report is designed to clarify many of the tax, benefit, and income redistribution aspects of Social Security for workers, families, and all individuals. It presents tabulations of the number of Americans who paid taxes and received benefits in 1997 under the OASDI programs by a variety of income and demographic characteristics. The data presented here should be employed along with rates of return as a benchmark for evaluating Social Security reform proposals.
A Summary of Findings
The Heritage analysis shows that average effective tax rates and benefit rates (or roughly the taxes paid and benefits received divided by total income) vary significantly across demographic and income groups:
- Workers with pre-OASDI incomes from $17,813 to $27,732 have the highest average effective Social Security tax rate (10.3 percent). Workers in the highest income group have the lowest tax rate (6.7 percent). Young workers who are 27 to 30 years of age have the highest tax rate of any age group (10.1 percent); and workers with a high school diploma or less have the highest tax rates of any educational group (9.9 percent).
- As a group, married families with children have the highest average effective payroll tax rate (8.9 percent) and pay the largest share of OASDI taxes (38.3 percent). Married families without children and single persons without children pay the lowest average effective tax rates.
- Families in the middle to upper income groups pay larger shares of OASDI taxes than do families with lower incomes. Families in the lowest pre-OASDI income decile ($2,867 or less) pay less than 0.1 percent of all OASDI taxes, while families in the highest income decile ($88,206 or more) pay 28.2 percent of all OASDI taxes. In 1997, families with incomes of $29,100 or more paid $261.9 billion more in payroll taxes than they received in benefits while families with incomes below that amount received $201.1 billion more in benefits than they paid in taxes.
- Social Security tax rates on pre-OASDI income for workers grouped by income are fairly steady as income rises except for the top income group, while the tax rates for all families and individuals grouped by income generally rise as income increases except for the top income group.
- For all individuals, women have a higher Social Security tax rate than men. On average, women pay an OASDI tax rate of 8.4 percent, or $1,472 per year, while men pay a rate of 8.2 percent, or $2,642. In 1997, the Social Security program transferred $23.9 billion from men to women.
- For all individuals, Hispanics and black Americans have higher OASDI tax rates than do whites and Americans of other races. Whites and Americans of other races pay tax rates of 8.1 percent and 8.5 percent, respectively, compared with 9 percent for blacks and 9.3 percent for Hispanics. Hispanics and Americans of other races on average paid significantly more in OASDI taxes than those groups received in benefits in 1997.
- Social Security tax rates vary significantly by state. Indiana, Mississippi, Michigan, South Carolina, Alabama, and Iowa have the highest tax rates while the District of Columbia, Alaska, Colorado, Louisiana, and Virginia have the lowest tax rates. In all, residents in 10 states receive more in Social Security benefits than they pay in taxes, while residents of 40 states and the District of Columbia pay more in taxes than they receive in benefits.
Overview of the Analysis
The analysis in this Report is based on data from the March 1998 Current Population Survey of the U.S. Census Bureau. A number of adjustments were made to the Census data to reconcile and calibrate them to Social Security Administration data (see Appendix A). The Report focuses on the average effective OASDI tax rate and benefit patterns for just one year (1997)--as such, it presents a snapshot in time. Social Security also has important effects on the redistribution of lifetime income. However, the annual data utilized in this Report are of limited use for the analysis of Social Security over time (see sidebar).
This Report first presents an examination of Social Security's tax and benefit distributions for workers. It then looks at all families and all individuals. The Report includes a methodological note (Appendix A) that describes the database constructed by the Center for Data Analysis for this analysis. All data tables referenced in the Report are contained in Appendix B.
THE PAYROLL TAX BURDEN ON WORKERS
Not all workers are covered by Social Security and have to pay Old-Age and Survivors and Disability Insurance taxes. Workers excluded from coverage fall into five major categories: federal civilian employees hired before January 1, 1984; certain state and local employees who are covered under another retirement system; railroad workers who are covered under the railroad retirement system; household and farm workers whose earnings do not meet certain minimum requirements; and persons with very low net earnings from self-employment. In 1997, 6.6 million, or 4.3 percent, of workers were not covered by the OASDI programs.
Income and Tax Rates. The Social Security system is funded by a payroll tax of 12.4 percent on the earned income (wages, salaries, and self-employment income) of covered workers. However, the average effective Social Security tax rate can vary for two reasons: (1) the share of earned income to total income can differ among covered workers; and (2) not all earned income is subject to OASDI taxes. Income from other sources--such as public assistance, Social Security and private pension benefits, and interest, rent, and dividend income--substantially affects the share of earned income to total income between workers. Any earned income over the maximum taxable amount--$65,400 in 1997 and $76,200 in 2000--is not subject to the OASDI tax.
Compared to all individuals, tax rates for workers are higher for all income groups and benefits are much smaller for lower income groups. Tax rates are higher for workers than for non-workers because a much larger share of their total income consists of earned income and is subject to OASDI taxes. Lower income groups of workers receive fewer benefits than all Americans because focusing the analysis on workers excludes most retirees who, on average, have substantially lower incomes and receive significantly higher Social Security benefits.
Average effective Social Security tax rates vary between different groups of workers.
In 1997, workers paid a total of $398.9 billion in OASDI taxes and received $55.3 billion in benefits (see Table B-1). The $55.3 billion in benefits is attributed to OASDI beneficiaries over the age of 61 and under the age of 18 who also work; persons who worked for part of the year and were retired or disabled for the rest of the year; and adults who have been assigned the Social Security benefits that their children under the age of 15 receive. Over 80 percent of the OASDI benefits that workers received in 1997 went to those over the age of 61.
On average, workers paid $2,715 in taxes, or 9.2 percent of their total income, and received $376 in Social Security benefits, or 1.3 percent of their total income. Grouping workers into 10 total income deciles, however, reveals that workers in most total income groups have average effective tax rates above 10 percent (see Table B-1, column 12).
Workers in most total income groups have average effective tax rates above 10 percent.
The two groups of workers with total incomes from $4,548 to $9,316 and $56,988 or more have the lowest average effective Social Security tax rates because a smaller share of their total income is subject to the OASDI tax. Workers with total incomes from $4,548 to $9,316 have a tax rate of 9.7 percent because they receive a larger share of their total income as a group from non-labor income sources such as public assistance and Social Security. Workers with total incomes of $56,988 or more have a tax rate of 6.8 percent because of Social Security's cap on taxable wages.
While the previous analysis of tax rates by total income is informative, a more accurate picture of the burden of Social Security taxes and the income dynamics of the OASDI program is gained by classifying workers according to their pre-OASDI income. Pre-OASDI income is the amount of workers' income before any Social Security benefits are received or any Social Security taxes are paid (see Appendix A). Grouping workers, families, or individuals by pre-OASDI income removes the effect that the Social Security program has on the distribution of total income and results in a more appropriate representation of the distribution of OASDI taxes, as well as the receipt and transfer of benefits by income.
Grouping workers into pre-OASDI income deciles decreases the average effective Social Security tax rate for all income groups but does not significantly change the distribution of taxes paid. The distribution of Social Security benefits, however, does substantially change. The four lowest pre-OASDI income groups of workers receive 60.6 percent of the Social Security benefits (see Table B-2, column 8) compared with 29.5 percent for the four lowest total income groups (see Table B-1, column 8). The small amount of OASDI benefits in the two lowest total income deciles compared with the same pre-OASDI income groups is attributable to the entitlement feature of Social Security benefits. Because entitlement to Social Security tends to lift workers out of the bottom total income decile, the workers that remain in the bottom total income decile are less likely to receive any Social Security benefits at all.
Except for the highest income group, the average effective Social Security tax rate for workers is fairly flat as income rises (see Chart 1). The OASDI tax rate is highest (10.3 percent) for workers with pre-OASDI income from $17,813 to $27,732, and lowest (6.7 percent) for workers with incomes above $59,580 (see Table B-2, column 12). Yet for workers within the broad range of income from $8,908 to $42,889, the pre-OASDI tax rate only varies slightly, between 10 percent and 10.3 percent. Despite some modest differences by income group, compared with individual income tax rates the pre-OASDI tax rates for workers are reasonably flat.

The average effective Social Security tax rate is highest (10.3 percent) for workers with pre-OASDI income from $17,813 to $27,732.
Workers in the two lowest pre-OASDI income deciles ($8,907 or less) pay just 3 percent of all OASDI taxes, while workers in the two highest income deciles ($42,890 or more) pay 44.4 percent of all taxes (see Chart 2). Workers with pre-OASDI incomes from $8,908 to $59,580, however, pay a significantly larger share of OASDI taxes (71 percent) than they receive in income (62.6 percent). (See Table B-2, columns 6 and 7). On average, workers in the lowest income group paid $191 in Social Security taxes in 1997 while workers in the fifth income decile paid $2,062 and workers in the highest income group paid $7,072 (see Table B-2, column 9).

Workers in the lowest income group receive 31.5 percent of their total pre-OASDI income from Social Security, suggesting that these benefits are important for some low-income workers (see Chart 1). Social Security benefits as a percent of workers' income quickly falls as income rises, which indicates that benefits are inversely graduated against income. For workers with incomes above $22,470, Social Security benefits account for less than 1 percent of their income.
Net OASDI Benefits.
In 1997, workers in all but the two lowest income groups paid more in taxes than they received in benefits (see Table B-2, column 5). This reflects one of Social Security's major principles: Individuals pay taxes into the system when they are working and collect benefits when they retire. In 1997, workers with pre-OASDI incomes of $8,908 or more paid $351.2 billion more in payroll taxes than they received in benefits, while workers with incomes below that amount received $7.3 billion more in benefits than they paid in taxes. Of the $398.9 billion that workers paid into Social Security in 1997, $336.5 billion was used for OASDI benefits to individuals (see Table B-8, column 4) and $62.4 billion went to pay for other federal government programs and to reduce publicly held federal debt.
Workers in all but the two lowest income groups paid more in taxes than they received in benefits.
As a group, the Social Security program hits hardest those workers who have pre-OASDI incomes of $34,370 to $42,889. In 1997, they paid a larger share of OASDI taxes than their share of income (see Table B-2, columns 6 and 7). They also had the second highest average effective OASDI tax rate (10.2 percent) and the lowest net benefit rate (-9.6 percent) of any income group (see Table B-2, columns 12 and 14).
Age and Tax Rates.
Much of the distribution of OASDI taxes and benefits by income can be attributed to the pattern of income by age. Grouping workers into 10 age groups (deciles) with a roughly equal number of workers in each group reveals that Social Security tax rates vary by age (see Chart 3). Workers 27 to 30 years of age pay the highest effective tax rate (10.1 percent), while people over the age of 57 pay the lowest rate (7.3 percent). Tax rates first rise and then fall with age because earned income as a percentage of pre-OASDI income also rises and then falls with age. The oldest age group of workers is the only one that receives more in benefits than they pay in taxes in any particular year.

Average income and OASDI taxes generally rise through age 57 and then fall to much lower levels for workers over the age of 57 (see Table B-3, columns 9 and 10). Average benefits for workers, on the other hand, are fairly low until age 62 when individuals become eligible for Social Security benefits. The graduated character of OASDI taxes and benefits with respect to pre-OASDI income can be attributed to the fact that incomes are, on average, higher during ages when OASDI taxes are paid and lower during the ages when benefits are received.
Other Demographic Characteristics and Tax Rates.
Average effective Social Security tax and benefit rates for workers vary by gender, race, marital status, and citizenship (see Chart 4, and Table B-4, columns 12 and 14).
- As a group, women workers have a higher OASDI tax rate (9.3 percent) than men (8.7 percent), although men and women have nearly the same net benefit rate.
- By race, Hispanic workers have the highest OASDI tax rate (9.8 percent) followed by blacks (9.6 percent). Americans of all other races have nearly the same Social Security tax rate as whites (8.9 percent and 8.8 percent, respectively). The net benefit rate by race also varies significantly.
- Single workers have a higher OASDI tax rate (9.2 percent) than married workers (8.8 percent), although single and married workers have nearly the same net benefit rate.
- Non-citizens who work have a tax rate of 9.7 percent, while workers who are naturalized citizens or who were born in the United States pay 8.8 percent and 8.9 percent of their income, respectively.

Education and Tax Rates.
OASDI tax rates for workers also vary by education (see Chart 4). High school graduates (with no college) and workers who did not graduate from high school have the highest tax rate (9.9 percent). High school graduates, however, pay on average significantly more OASDI taxes than those without high school diplomas, $2,368 compared with $1,380. Workers with some college or a two-year college degree pay an average tax rate of 9.4 percent, or $2,601, compared with 7.9 percent ($4,043) for college graduates (see Table B-4, columns 9 and 12). College graduates have a lower tax rate because a larger share of their earnings is above the taxable wage cap. College graduates do, however, pay an average of $4,043 in taxes compared with $2,368 for high school graduates.
Labor Factors and Tax Rates.
Social Security tax rates for workers vary by labor force sector (see Chart 5). The five major labor force groups are the private sector, the federal government, state government, local government, and the self-employed. OASDI tax rates are highest for workers in the private sector (9.5 percent) and lowest for workers in the federal government (6.9 percent). Tax rates vary by labor force sector because many federal, state, and local government workers are not covered by Social Security and do not pay OASDI taxes.

OASDI tax rates also vary by the number of hours worked (full-time or part-time work) and the number of weeks worked per year (see Chart 5). Americans who work full-time 48 to 52 weeks per year pay the highest Social Security tax rate (9.1 percent). Americans who work less than half the year pay the lowest tax rates; 7.4 percent if they work full-time and 5.1 percent if they work part-time. Part-year and part-time workers pay the lowest rate because earned income is a relatively small share of their total income. Part-time, part-year workers (one to 26 and 27 to 47 weeks per year) were the only two groups that received more in Social Security benefits than they paid in taxes in 1997 (see Table B-4, column 5).
THE PAYROLL TAX BURDEN ON FAMILIES
Although few currently employed workers receive OASDI benefits, it is more often the case that significant benefits flow to a non-working family member. Also, many families, particularly those over the age of 61, receive all or most of their income from Social Security. Other families pay significant amounts of OASDI taxes and receive no benefits.
In 1997, families paid a total of $397.9 billion in taxes and received $337.1 billion in benefits (see Table B-5). On average, families paid $3,397 in taxes, or 8.2 percent of their pre-OASDI income, and received $2,878 in Social Security benefits, or 7 percent of their income. Grouping families into 10 pre-OASDI income deciles, however, reveals that the average effective Social Security tax rates for families varies considerably more than they do for workers (see Tables B-2 and B-5, column 12).
Income and Tax Rates.
Families with lower pre-OASDI incomes have lower average effective Social Security tax rates than do families with higher incomes (see Chart 6). Families with incomes from $48,589 to $88,205 pay the highest OASDI tax rate (9.6 percent), while families in the lowest pre-OASDI income group of $2,867 or less pay the lowest rate (3.2 percent). (See Table B-5, column 12.) The average effective Social Security tax rate for families increases steadily as income rises except for the top income group. Average taxes paid in 1997 vary from $26 per family in the lowest income group to $9,582 per family in the highest income group (see Table B-5, column 9).

Families in middle- to upper-income groups pay a larger share of Social Security taxes than do families with lower incomes (see Chart 7). Families in the lowest income group ($2,867 or less) pay less than 0.1 percent of all OASDI taxes, while families in the highest income group ($88,206 or more) pay 28.2 percent of all taxes.

This substantial rise in the share of payroll taxes paid by income is attributable to the increasing share of total income that goes into different deciles as income rises and the strong association between earnings and income. As income rises, earnings account for a greater share of total income except in the highest income decile. In the highest income decile, earned income as a share of total income declines because of an increase in the share of that income from interest, rent, and dividend income.
Families with pre-OASDI incomes from $14,844 to $88,205 pay a larger share of Social Security taxes than their share of income (see Table B-5, columns 6 and 7). This results from the fact that earned income accounts for a greater share of the total income for these families compared with other income groups. Families with incomes below $14,844 and those in the highest family income group ($88,206 and above) pay a smaller share of OASDI taxes than income for two different reasons. A significant portion of earned income in the top family income decile is above the tax cap ($65,400 in 1997) and is not subject to the OASDI tax. For low-income families, public assistance and Social Security benefits combine to reduce the portion of income subject to payroll taxes and the amount of taxes paid on that income.
Families in the lowest income group pay less than 0.1 percent of all OASDI taxes while families in the highest income group pay 28.2 percent of all taxes.
Families in the lowest income groups receive the largest shares of OASDI benefits (see Chart 7). Families with pre-OASDI income of $2,867 or less receive 29.6 percent of all OASDI benefits and families with pre-OASDI income of $2,868 to $8,577 receive 16.4 percent of all OASDI benefits. The high OASDI benefit shares in the two lowest income groups reflects the dependency many Americans have on the Social Security program as their major source of retirement income.
Net OASDI Benefits.
Taking into account both benefits and taxes, or net benefits, reveals significant differences between income groups. As a group, families with low pre-OASDI incomes received significantly more Social Security benefits in 1997 than they paid in taxes, while families in middle- to upper-income groups paid substantially more in taxes than they received in benefits. As a group, families with incomes below $8,578 received $151.7 billion more in benefits than they paid in taxes while families with incomes of $29,100 or more paid $261.9 billion more in taxes than they received in benefits (see Table B-5, column 5). This reflects the fact that pre-OASDI family income is likely to be significantly lower for elderly retirees than for middle-aged working families. In 1997, the tax and benefit structure of the Social Security program transferred $201.1 billion from middle- and upper-income families to lower-income families. The ratio of combined OASDI taxes and benefits, or net benefits, to family income indicates that, on balance, the Social Security program is very progressive (see Table B-5, column 14).
Poverty Levels and Taxes.
An alternative way to analyze the distribution of OASDI taxes and benefits by income is to group families by poverty level. Families with incomes 2.00 to 3.99 times the poverty level pay the highest average tax rate (9.4 percent), while people living in poor families pay an average tax rate of 6.9 percent (see Table B-6, column 12). As a group, poor families pay very little (1.4 percent) of the OASDI taxes (see Table B-6, column 7). Moreover, near-poor families pay only 6.9 percent of all OASDI taxes, while families with incomes four times the poverty level pay 64.2 percent of all OASDI taxes (see Table B-6,
column 7).
Poor families have the lowest average OASDI tax rate, 6.9 percent.
Families with Children.
Still another way to analyze the distribution of OASDI taxes and benefits is to group families by marital status and the presence of children. As a group, married families with children pay the largest share of OASDI taxes (38.3 percent) and have the highest average payroll tax rate of 8.9 percent (see Chart 8 and Table B-7, columns 7 and 12). This higher payroll tax rate arises because married couples with children are more likely to have a member in the labor force compared with other family groups. They also are likely to be in age groups where earnings are the highest. Many married families also have more than one wage earner.

As a group, married families with children pay the largest share of OASDI taxes.
Married families without children pay 32 percent of all OASDI taxes and have the lowest average OASDI tax rate of 7.7 percent. Single persons without children pay 24.3 percent of all OASDI taxes and have an average Social Security tax rate of 8 percent. These two household groups also receive the largest shares of OASDI benefits because many of these individuals are of retirement age with grown children (who have their own families). Single persons and married families without children were the only two groups in 1997 to receive more in Social Security benefits than they paid in OASDI taxes.
THE PAYROLL TAX BURDEN ON INDIVIDUALS
To examine the pattern of Social Security taxes and benefits for various demographic groups, it also is useful to shift the analysis from workers and families to all persons. The use of "person income" instead of "family income" significantly increases the dispersion of the income distribution relative to families. Expanding the analysis from workers to all individuals facilitates the analysis of all OASDI benefits instead of just the share of benefits received by workers. The analysis of individuals, like workers and families, focuses on pre-OASDI income tax rates.
In 1997, Americans paid $398.9 billion in OASDI taxes and received $336.5 billion in benefits (see Table B-8). On average, individuals paid $2,047 in taxes, or 8.3 percent of their pre-OASDI income, and received $1,727 in benefits, or 7 percent of their income. Grouping individuals into pre-OASDI income deciles reveals that average effective Social Security tax rates vary significantly more for all individuals than for just workers.
Income and Tax Rates. The average effective OASDI tax rate on individual pre-OASDI income is fairly graduated (see Chart 9). Individuals with lower incomes have a lower Social Security tax rate than do people with higher incomes. The tax rate starts at 5 percent for Americans with pre-OASDI incomes of less than $3,423 and rises to 9.6 percent for persons with incomes from $29,198 to $53,609 before falling to 6.8 percent for the highest income group ($53,610 or more). Average OASDI taxes paid per year vary from $5 per person in the lowest income group to $6,452 per person in the highest income group. (See Table B-8, column 12 and column 9).

Individuals with higher incomes pay a larger share of OASDI taxes than do persons with lower incomes (see Chart 10). Americans with pre-OASDI incomes below $530 paid less than 0.1 percent of all OASDI taxes while individuals in the highest income group ($53,610 or more) paid 31.5 percent of all Social Security taxes. People with pre-OASDI incomes from $11,875 to $53,609 paid a larger share of Social Security taxes in 1997 than their share of income (see Table B-8, columns 6 and 7). Americans with pre-OASDI incomes below $11,875 and those in the highest income group paid a smaller share of OASDI taxes than their share of income.

Individuals in the lowest income groups receive the largest shares of Social Security benefits (see Chart 10). Persons with pre-OASDI incomes below $530 received 31.4 percent of all OASDI benefits and individuals with pre-OASDI incomes from $530 to $3,422 received 17.4 percent of all Social Security benefits. The high OASDI benefit shares in the two lowest income groups reflects the fact that for 18 percent of Americans over the age of 64, Social Security is their only source of income. Despite the relatively high share of OASDI benefits that go to groups of low-income individuals, economists have observed that Social Security's rate of return for low-wage individuals is below the rate of return that is available from other retirement savings options.
Net OASDI Benefits.
Taking both taxes and benefits, or net benefits, into account reveals important differences between income groups. Persons with low pre-OASDI incomes received considerably more Social Security benefits than they paid in taxes, while people above the median pre-OASDI income paid substantially more in taxes than they received in benefits. Individuals with incomes below $16,713 received $227.1 billion more in benefits than they paid in taxes, while persons with incomes above $16,712 paid $289.4 billion more in taxes than they received in benefits (see Table B-8, column 5).
Social Security benefits as a percent of income falls rapidly when moving from the lowest to highest pre-OASDI income group, indicating that OASDI benefits are very progressive (see Table B-8, column 13). The ratio of combined OASDI taxes and benefits, or net benefits, to individual pre-OASDI income also indicates that the Social Security program progressively redistributes income in any particular year (see Table B-8, column 14).
Age and Tax Rates.
Much of the distribution of OASDI taxes and benefits by income can be attributed to the pattern of income by age. Grouping individuals into ten age groups (deciles) with a roughly equal number of persons in each group reveals that the young (ages 15 to 22) and the elderly (ages 62 and over) pay substantially smaller shares of OASDI taxes than do Americans ages 23 to 61 (see Table B-9). Average income and OASDI taxes generally rise through age 52, decline slightly for the 53- to 61-year-old age group, and then fall to much lower levels for individuals over the age of 61 (see Table B-9, columns 9 and 10). Average benefits, on the other hand, start low and rise continually with age. The graduated character of OASDI taxes and benefits with respect to pre-OASDI income can be attributed to the fact that incomes are, on average, higher during ages when OASDI taxes are paid and lower during the ages when benefits are received. In 1997, the Social Security program transferred $272.9 billion from Americans under the age of 62 to individuals over the age of 61.
Social Security tax rates for all individuals vary considerably by age. Tax rates first rise and then fall with age because earned income as a percentage of total income rises and then falls with age. OASDI tax rates rise with age until age 28 and then decline steadily (see Table B-9, column 13). Americans 23 to 28 years old pay the highest tax rate (10 percent), while people over the age of 71 pay the lowest rate (1.5 percent). (See Chart 11.) Moreover, the percentage of individuals with any earned income is high from age 23 to age 53 and then falls as labor force participation declines for persons over the age of 53.
By age, Americans 23 to 28 years old pay the highest tax rate.

Other Demographic Characteristics and Tax Rates.
The Social Security effective tax rate is higher for woman than for men (see Chart 12), partly due to a higher percentage of men with earnings above the Social Security taxable wage cap. On average, women pay an OASDI tax rate of 8.4 percent while men pay a rate of 8.2 percent (see Table B-10, column 12). Women pay on average $1,472 per year in OASDI taxes and receive $1,713 in benefits for an average net benefit of $241 (see Table B-10, column 11). Men, on the other hand, pay an average of $2,642 per year in OASDI taxes and receive $1,741 in benefits for an average net loss of $902. In 1997, the Social Security program transferred $23.9 billion from men to women primarily because men have a higher employment rate and women live longer.

Women have a higher Social Security average effective tax rate than do men, but they also receive more in benefits. Men pay 63.4 percent of all OASDI taxes, while women pay just 36.6 percent.
Men also pay a substantially larger share of OASDI taxes than do women. Men pay 63.4 percent of all OASDI taxes, while women pay just 36.6 percent. This results from the fact that men have higher employment rates and median earnings than women do. Even so, economic studies show that rates of return from Social Security fall below 3 percent for nearly all women who work--well below the rate of return for short-term certificates of deposit available at most banks.
Compared with other races, Hispanics have the highest OASDI tax rate.
Hispanics have higher average effective OASDI tax rates than do white, black, and Americans of other races (see Chart 12). Hispanics pay an average 9.3 percent compared with 9 percent for blacks, 8.5 percent for other races, and 8.1 percent for whites (see Table B-10, column 12). On average, Hispanics and Americans of other races pay significantly more OASDI taxes than they receive in benefits compared with white or black Americans. Americans of other races have a net tax payment equal to 5.7 percent of their income, and Hispanics have a net tax payment equal to 4.7 percent of their income, compared with 0.7 percent for whites and 1.6 percent for blacks (see Table B-10, column 14).
Married men and women have nearly the same effective tax rate as single Americans. The tax rate for married persons is 8.2 percent compared with 8.3 percent for single individuals. Single individuals, however, receive an average net benefit from Social Security equal to 1.4 percent of their total pre-OASDI income, or $261 per year, while married people have a net tax payment equal to 2.7 percent of their income, or $801 (see Table B-10, columns 11 and 14). This difference arises partly because in any given year retired individuals are more likely to be single, while married individuals are more likely to be in higher income groups.
Non-citizens have a higher OASDI tax rate than do U.S. born or naturalized citizens (see Chart 12). Non-citizens have an average effective tax rate of 9.3 percent compared with 8.2 percent for U.S. born and naturalized citizens (see Table B-10, column 12). Non-citizens on average pay significantly more in OASDI taxes than they receive in benefits compared with U.S. citizens. Non-citizens pay on average $1,820 per year in OASDI taxes and receive $484 in benefits for an average net tax of $1,336. U.S.-born citizens, on the other hand, pay an average net tax of just $241.
By education, high school graduates have the highest OASDI effective tax rate.
Education and Tax Rates.
High school graduates (with no college education) have the highest OASDI effective tax rate (see Chart 12). High school graduates pay an average tax rate of 9 percent, compared with 8.2 percent for people who did not graduate from high school, 8.7 percent for individuals with some college, and 7.5 percent for college graduates (see Table B-10, column 12). Americans who did not finish high school have a lower tax rate because a larger share of them are retired or are receiving public assistance. College graduates have a lower tax rate because a larger share of their earnings is above the taxable wage cap. College graduates do, however, pay an average of $3,452 in taxes compared with $1,751 for high school graduates.
For all individuals, the burden of Social Security taxes falls hardest on Hispanic women, ages 23 to 28, with just a high school diploma and pre-OASDI incomes of between $29,198 and $53,609.
High school graduates (with no college) and Americans who did not finish high school receive the largest shares of Social Security benefits (see Table B-10, column 8). Both groups account for 66.3 percent of all OASDI benefits primarily because the educational attainment of today's retirees is significantly lower than that of Americans born after 1945.
State Tax Rates.
Social Security tax rates vary significantly by state (see Map 1). The effective tax rates range from a high of 9.3 percent in Indiana to a low of 6.8 percent in the District of Columbia (see Table B-11, column 12). Indiana, Mississippi, Michigan, South Carolina, Alabama, and Iowa have the six highest tax rates, while the District of Columbia, Alaska, Colorado, Louisiana, and Virginia have the lowest tax rates. West Virginia, on the other hand, receives the largest average net benefit from Social Security benefits, while Alaska pays the largest average net tax (see Table B-12, column 11). In all, Americans in 10 states receive more in Social Security benefits than they pay in taxes, while those in 40 states and the District of Columbia pay more in taxes than they receive in benefits.

CONCLUSION
The tax and benefit dynamics of the Social Security program reflects the policy objectives of the current Old-Age, Survivors Insurance, and Disability Insurance programs. When this analysis of who pays the payroll tax and who receives OASDI benefits is placed alongside the analysis of Social Security's rate of return by income and demographic groups, the true challenge facing Social Security becomes clear. Policymakers attempting to reform Social Security may find it difficult, if not impossible, to do two things simultaneously: maintain Social Security's current structure while improving the system's rate of return.
The traditional "fixes" for Social Security's funding crisis (higher taxes, lower benefits, and increases in the retirement age) all would likely result in increasing the average effective tax rates at each income decile. Put another way, these approaches to resolving Social Security's financial challenge would wo