Skip to main content
Events •

Social Security Symposium: A Global Perspective — Opening Remarks and US Social Security and OECD Retirement Systems: A Comparison

As we approach the 90th anniversary of the US Social Security program in 2025, and as the program’s trust fund is projected to be depleted by 2033, we find ourselves at a critical juncture. Social Security reform is essential to preserving the program’s ability to provide critical economic security to vulnerable seniors by averting indiscriminate benefit cuts, which are scheduled to occur by law when the trust fund goes to zero. Sensible reforms will ensure the program can meet this pivotal role without imposing undue debt burdens or excessive taxes on younger generations. There are further opportunities to modernize Social Security to enhance individual liberty and reduce disincentives to work and saving that undermine US economic growth.

This symposium will foster insightful discussions on the various dimensions of Social Security reform. By bringing together a diverse group of US and international experts, we will explore shared challenges and identify global lessons to inform US reform options. The insights and lessons from our conversations will equip US legislators with informed perspectives, innovative solutions, and evidence‐​based strategies to reforming Social Security over the next decade. Breakfast and lunch will be served.

Featuring
Senator Bill Cassidy photo
Senator Bill Cassidy

(R‑LA)

Andrew G. Biggs circle crop
Andrew G. Biggs

Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute

Veronique de Rugy

George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and Senior Research Fellow, Mercatus Center