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SOCIAL SECURITY GROWS UP: SOME KEY DEVELOPMENTS
ОглавлениеSince President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Social Security into law in 1935, the program has evolved. Here are some key milestones:
1939: Congress added benefits for retirees’ spouses and minor children, as well as dependents of workers who die.
1950: Coverage was extended to farm workers, domestic workers (such as housekeepers and gardeners), employees of nonprofits, and self-employed nonprofessionals.
1954: Coverage was extended to self-employed farmers and certain professionals, such as accountants, architects, and engineers.
1956: Benefits were added for disabled workers ages 50 to 64 and adult disabled children of workers who earned benefits. Social Security introduced early retirement benefits for women only.
1960: Benefits were added for dependents of disabled workers.
1961: Men were given the option of early retirement benefits, five years after this choice was granted to women.
1965: Congress approved Medicare, a program of federal health insurance for people 65 and older, long sought by advocates of Social Security and social insurance.
1972: Congress approved annual cost-of-living increases for Social Security, linked to the rise in consumer prices. (It had previously approved some benefit hikes on an ad hoc basis.)
1977: Congress approved wage indexing, which adjusts retirement benefits upward to make sure that they reflect the long-term increase in wages that took place during a worker’s lifetime.
1983: Congress agreed to gradually raise the age for full retirement benefits from its traditional level of 65 to 67. That increase is still being phased in. The full retirement age has reached 66 for people born between 1943 and 1954 and will gradually move up to 67 for people born in 1960 or later. The 1983 law also introduced taxation of Social Security benefits for higher-income retirees, a shift that is causing growing numbers of people to pay income taxes on part of their Social Security income.
2014: The Social Security Administration began to process and approve some claims for benefits related to same-sex marriage, including claims for spousal and survivor benefits in states that recognize such unions as legal. The new policy followed a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2013 that Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act was unconstitutional.
2015: The Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriages have a constitutional right in all states. The SSA recognizes same-sex marriage in all states and gives benefits to spouses.