- The Social Security program is projected to become insolvent by the end of 2032, accelerating from last year's estimate of 2033.
- This insolvency would result in an automatic 22 percent reduction in monthly checks for beneficiaries if Congress does not intervene.
- The revised timeline is partly attributed to the fiscal impact of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act on benefit taxation.
- The shortfall stems from long-term demographic shifts, including an aging U.S. population and a declining ratio of active workers contributing.
- Policy experts emphasize that insolvency does not mean the program will stop paying benefits, but rather that payments will continue at a reduced rate.
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