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Social Security

Elizabeth Warren Wants To Raise Taxes and Give All the Money to Senior Citizens

Her plan to fix Social Security's fiscal flaws would ask workers to cover the full cost. Some Republicans are supporting it too.

Eric Boehm | 6.24.2026 3:40 PM

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Elizabeth Warren | Photo: Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/Newscom
(Photo: Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/Newscom)

Social Security doesn't have enough money to pay everything that has been promised, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) has a plan to fix that: Making workers pay more in taxes without asking older Americans to give up any of their benefits.

Warren has been pushing this idea for a few months now, under the guise of defending Social Security against the Trump administration, which she claims is "threatening the benefits that millions of Americans have paid into their entire working lives." In reality, the threat to Social Security is the program's own math. When it reaches insolvency in 2032, the Social Security trustees project that all benefits will be cut by about 23 percent—that's the trajectory that will become reality if nothing is done.

In an op-ed published this week in The New York Times, Warren and Sen. Bernie Moreno (R–Ohio) lay out what they want to do: Eliminate the cap on the payroll tax. That sounds like a wonky idea, but it's pretty straightforward. Social Security is funded with a 12.4 percent tax on all earnings up to $184,500. Earnings that exceed the cap are not taxed—so, a single worker cannot pay more than $22,878 into Social Security annually.

Raising the cap or removing it, as Warren wants to do, would provide more revenue for Social Security to redistribute to retirees. But Warren's plan has mathematical, political, and moral problems.

Let's tackle the math first. As the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget points out, eliminating the payroll tax cap would extend Social Security's solvency by just 21 years. According to Social Security's own estimates, eliminating the payroll tax would keep the program out of the red for just four years. It would not fix any of Social Security's flaws—like the too-generous benefits that are driving the program into insolvency in the first place—and would accomplish little more than postponing the eventual reckoning that Social Security faces.

In short, it would be a very expensive way to kick the can down the road.

That's where you hit the political problem. As Moreno and Warren explain in their Times op-ed, this proposed tax increase would fall entirely on wealthier Americans. They see that as a perk, rather than a problem.

It is certainly no secret that Democrats (and now at least one Republican) want to soak the rich with higher taxes. But let's spin this idea forward a bit. Let's assume Warren and her buddies can pass a bill that eliminates the payroll tax cap. Now, they've got a huge pot of new tax revenue, all of it extracted from the wealthiest Americans. Mission accomplished, right?

Well, what's the best way to spend that money? Warren's plan is to hand all of it to retirees in the form of Social Security benefits.

That means every other Democratic spending priority gets nothing out of what would be one of the biggest tax increases in American history. Nothing for healthcare programs, nothing for schools, nothing for welfare. The senior citizens get it all. Is that really a proposal that Democrats will support?

That runs straight into the moral problem. In the Times, Moreno and Warren write that "instead of cutting benefits for the retirees who count on Social Security, we need to take bipartisan action to protect those benefits, reward work and restore fairness."

But what is fair about a proposal that says Social Security beneficiaries shouldn't have to absorb any benefit cuts? Some households get more than $5,000 per month in Social Security benefits, and older Americans are the wealthiest cohort of people in the country.

If Moreno and Warren believe that wealthier Americans ought to shoulder the burden of fixing Social Security, they should be looking to cut Social Security benefits, either by means testing or by reconfiguring how benefits are structured. In 2022, for example, the Congressional Budget Office calculated that Social Security's insolvency could be fixed by giving all seniors a flat monthly payment equal to 150 percent of the federal poverty line—about $1,700 per month. That would certainly be better than asking workers to pick up the full tab.

The real kicker is that Moreno and Warren have the gall to describe their proposal as being about "fairness." In reality, they are prioritizing older Americans' economic well-being over every other political constituency in the country. They want higher taxes on workers, and they want all of that new tax revenue to flow exclusively to senior citizens, all while refusing to ask retirees to be part of the solution.

That's not good policy, it doesn't seem like smart politics, and it certainly isn't fair to anyone who has to foot the bill.

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Eric Boehm is a reporter at Reason.

Social SecurityElizabeth WarrenFiscal policyTaxesPayroll taxEntitlementsGovernment SpendingSenateSenatePoliticsCongress
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  1. Eeyore   2 hours ago

    If I do some socialist math - if we just tax Elizabeth Warren 100% of her net worth every year, we can give everyone $1000.

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  2. psmoot   2 hours ago

    Here's something I'm puzzled by.

    As of today, FICA taxes already don't cover SS payments. The SSA is redeeming the T-bills in the SS trust fund to make the payments. If you follow the cash, current SS benefit payments are being made with a mix of FICA and general taxes (which mostly means income taxes).

    When the trust fund runs out, there doesn't seem to be any real reason to change the cash flows. The day before the trust fund runs dry, 20+% of payments will already be being paid from current income tax revenues. There's no reason that couldn't continue the day after.

    Alternatively, if SS payments get cut by 20%, that should directly mean the general fund deficit should drop by the same amount of dollars. That part never seems to make it into the news stories.

    One could certainly have opinions about what should be done but I don't see how the trust fund running out has to be the catastrophe it's made out to be. Congress simply admits SS payments are paid for with general revenue, passes a bill to that effect, and adjourns early to get ice cream. The politics might get exciting but the concept is very simple.

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    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 hour ago

      Ss was allowed in courts as a cost neutral program. So once the "trust fund" is depleted, there is no way to pull back from the general fund like they are now. Law would need to be passed.

      But dont worry. A dem president will ignore this and a friendly judge will allow it.

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  3. MoreFreedom   1 hour ago

    "But what is fair about a proposal that says Social Security beneficiaries shouldn't have to absorb any benefit cuts?"

    Boehm misses the libertarian position and the moral issue. There's nothing fair about taking the fruits of people's labor, to give it those who haven't labored. One's retirement security should be the responsibility of the person who chooses to retire, or chooses not to save for retirement, or the responsibility of families, churches and voluntary institutions.

    In a libertarian world, you wouldn't be responsible for other people's retirement, and those that suffer for lack of money in their retirement situation will be a lesson to others who are smart enough to learn from other people's mistakes.

    In fact, social security leads people to ignore their retirement and make the mistake of counting on a socialist government, as ours is to the extent that they've socialized individual retirement responsibility. Socialist programs always run out of other people's money. So why is anyone surprised about this program's ongoing funding issue? Because they believe in socialism apparently.

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    1. creech   1 hour ago

      Yes, but how do we get politically from here to there? The Libertarian Party's Bumper Hornberger plan to simply abolish s.s. tomorrow isn't going to be adopted any time soon. Is there a transition strategy that can be sold to the voters?

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      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   48 minutes ago

        Rip the bandaid off.

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      2. middlefinger   29 minutes ago

        401k defined contribution plans perhaps. The problem is Congress, for the most part, are not risk takers. They honestly believe in a life without risk,
        Socialism “guaranteed” income.

        The laws of physics are suspended and the tide no longer moves in and out, add some free ponies. Money falls from the sky!!

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  4. Idaho-Bob   1 hour ago

    You guys debating the idiocy of E Warren's financial schemes, and all I can do is look at the fat bitch behind her with the illuminated frames.

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    1. Thoritsu   30 minutes ago

      Hilarious!

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  5. Adans smith   29 minutes ago

    This is why so many people hate us libertarians .Wanting to just cut the program cold turkey or make big cuts forgetting a vast number of people that depend on it is foolish. It needs to be changed , but you can just throw people into the street.Mean while Warren Buffet and his kind receives their payment monthly.

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    1. middlefinger   25 minutes ago

      The program can easily transition into a defined contribution 401k plan. Politicians want defined benefits- A free lunch

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  6. Thoritsu   28 minutes ago

    The ONLY plan to save Social Stupidity I will support is one that phases it out over time, in deference to a set of private programs that are NOT a Ponzi scheme. FDR was a complete DOUCHE.

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  7. Rick James   25 minutes ago

    This resident is of two minds.

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  8. Winston in Wonderland   24 minutes ago

    The "Social Security Trust Fund" consists of IOUs from the Federal Government.

    The Federal Government raises revenue through taxes.

    Thus, if the Federal Government is going to honor its IOUs, it's going to need to raise taxes.

    I'm not sure why that's so complicated.

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  9. middlefinger   23 minutes ago

    How will the meth heads pay the dealers?

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