After years of inadequate funding and thanks to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing "great resignation," the Social Security Administration is facing a 25-year low in the level of staff working to help Americans claim their retirement and disability benefits.
The staffing shortfall, while starting to ease thanks to a hiring push initiated last year, is interfering with the agency's ability to provide the level of service its leaders and beneficiaries expect.
According to the acting Social Security commissioner, Kilolo Kijakazi, an immediate and substantial additional investment by Congress is needed to fill key vacant positions and bring the SSA to full fighting strength.
If the federal government doesn't provide more resources to the program for hiring and general administration, Kijakazi warns, Americans are likely to face a more challenging time accessing benefits, especially as the historically large population of baby boomers enters retirement and begins to file claims.
A Stark Warning
Kijakazi shared her warning during an online public policy forum event hosted Tuesday by the Urban Institute, where she previously served as an institute fellow focused on issues related to retirement security and the racial and gender inequities facing U.S. workers and communities.
According to Kijakazi, the Social Security program plays a major role in providing retirement security to all Americans, but the program is especially critical for African Americans and Hispanic Americans. These communities have lower average incomes, she explained, meaning Social Security tends to replace more of their working wages, especially relative to white men.
As such, Kijakazi emphasized, it is of paramount importance for the ongoing pursuit of racial and gender equality in the United States that the Social Security program be put on a healthy financial footing for the long term. It's also a matter of basic economic stability, she said, given the importance of Social Security benefits to the retirement plans of Americans all across the economic spectrum.
As Kijakazi emphasized, it is essential for Congress to take steps to adequately fund both the Social Security program's benefit funds and also the Social Security Administration itself. These two issues are often conflated in the eyes of the public, she noted, leading to confusion on the part of taxpayers and consternation on the part of SSA leaders tasked with stewarding the incredibly important retirement income insurance program.
SSA Staffing Shortage
As Kijakazi recalled, the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic forced the SSA, like so many other public and private employers, to transition to a digital-first approach to customer service.