HR-3921-117
ASSUMING FIRST SPONSORSHIP - Mr. Murphy (NC) asked unanimous consent that he may hereafter be considered as the first sponsor of H.R. 3921, a bill originally introduced by Representative Walorski, for the purpose of adding cosponsors and requesting reprintings pursuant to clause 7 of rule XII. Agreed to without objection.
What it does
This bill would eliminate the Social Security earnings test for beneficiaries who are below full retirement age. Currently, Social Security retirement benefits are reduced by $1 for every $2 earned above $18,960 per year for those beneficiaries. If enacted, those reductions would no longer apply, allowing affected recipients to collect their full Social Security benefit regardless of how much they earn from work.
Who benefits
Social Security retirement beneficiaries who are below full retirement age (currently 67 for those born after 1960) and who earn more than $18,960 per year from work. This group includes early retirees who returned to or continued working, lower-income seniors who rely on both wages and Social Security to make ends meet, and workers in physically demanding jobs who claimed benefits early but continued working part-time.
Who is hurt
Current and future Social Security beneficiaries as a whole, to the extent that eliminating the earnings test accelerates benefit payments and increases program costs, potentially affecting the long-term solvency of the Social Security Trust Fund. Younger workers who pay payroll taxes into the system could face higher future taxes or reduced future benefits if the Trust Fund is drawn down more quickly. Taxpayers generally could be affected if program shortfalls require general revenue transfers.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the earnings test functions as a penalty on working seniors, discouraging older Americans from remaining in the workforce at a time when labor shortages are a significant economic concern. They contend that Social Security benefits are earned through decades of payroll tax contributions, and reducing those benefits simply because a recipient also earns wages amounts to a double penalty on productive work. Supporters also note that the earnings test disproportionately affects lower-income seniors who need both wages and benefits to cover basic living costs, while wealthier retirees who live off investment income — which is not subject to the earnings test — face no such reduction. Removing the test, they argue, would promote workforce participation, reduce economic inequality among seniors, and honor the contributory nature of the Social Security program.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that eliminating the earnings test would accelerate Social Security benefit payments to people who are still earning substantial wages, directing limited program resources toward those with demonstrated income rather than those most in need. They contend that the earnings test serves as a means of preserving Trust Fund solvency by deferring full payments until beneficiaries are more likely to depend on them, and that removing it would worsen the program's already-projected funding shortfall. Opponents also note that benefits withheld under the earnings test are not lost — they are recalculated upward once the beneficiary reaches full retirement age — meaning the test is a deferral, not a permanent reduction. Directing additional payments to working seniors, they argue, could hasten the depletion of the Trust Fund and ultimately harm all current and future beneficiaries who depend on the program's long-term stability.