Social Security: Trust Fund Investment
Practices

Dawn Nuschler
Specialist in Income Security
April 1, 2013
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RS20607
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Social Security: Trust Fund Investment Practices

Summary
The Social Security Act has always required surplus Social Security revenues (revenues in excess
of program expenditures) to be invested in U.S. government securities (or U.S. government-
backed securities). In recent years, attention has been focused on alternative investment practices
in an effort to increase the interest earnings of the trust funds, among other goals. This report
describes Social Security trust fund investment practices under current law.


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Social Security: Trust Fund Investment Practices

Contents
Background ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Issues................................................................................................................................................ 2

Contacts
Author Contact Information............................................................................................................. 3

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Social Security: Trust Fund Investment Practices

Background
Social Security is financed primarily by payroll and self-employment taxes, as well as by a
portion of the proceeds from the income taxation of Social Security benefits. The revenues are
deposited in the U.S. Treasury. Social Security benefits and administrative expenses are also paid
from the U.S. Treasury. By law, if Social Security revenues exceed expenditures, the “surplus” is
credited to the Social Security trust funds in the form of U.S. government securities. The money
itself, however, is used to pay for whatever other expenses the government may have at the time.
There is no separate pool of money set aside for Social Security purposes. That is not to say that
the trust funds are ephemeral—as long as the trust funds show a positive balance, they represent
the authority and an obligation for the U.S. Treasury to issue benefit payments during periods
when the program’s expenditures exceed revenues. At the end of calendar year 2012, the trust
funds were credited with holdings of $2.7 trillion.1 By the end of calendar year 2020, trust fund
assets are projected to reach $3.1 trillion (in current dollars).2 Section 201 of the Social Security
Act provides the following guidelines for trust fund investment.
1. Funds not immediately in demand for benefits or administrative expenses are to
be invested in interest-bearing obligations guaranteed as to both principal and
interest by the United States.
2. Obligations are to be purchased at issue at the issue price or at the market price
for outstanding obligations.
3. The Managing Trustee of the Social Security trust funds (the Secretary of the
Treasury) is required to invest in special “nonmarketable” federal public-debt
obligations—special issues to the trust funds that are not available to the general
public—except where he or she determines that the purchase of marketable
federal securities is “in the public interest.”
4. Special issues shall have maturities fixed with due regard for the needs of the
trust funds and will pay a rate of interest, calculated at the time of issue, equal to
the average market yield on all marketable interest-bearing obligations of the
United States that are not due or callable (redeemable) for at least four years.
5. Marketable federal securities purchased by the trust funds may be sold at the
market price and special issue obligations may be redeemed at par plus accrued
interest (without penalty for redemption before maturity).
The Treasury Department has determined that the purchase of marketable federal securities (i.e.,
public issues) would be in the public interest only when it might serve to stabilize the market for
Treasury issues. Because an “unstable market” would be characterized by falling bond prices,
purchases of marketable federal securities at these times would appear to be advantageous for the

1 The Social Security program has two separate trust funds—the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) trust fund
and the Disability Insurance (DI) trust fund. The amounts cited in this report are for the OASI and DI trust funds on a
combined basis (referred to as the Social Security trust funds). Historical trust fund data are available on the Social
Security Administration (SSA) website at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/STATS/table4a3.html.
2 Projected trust fund assets are shown in The 2012 Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and
Survivors Insurance and Federal Disability Insurance Trust Funds, April 23, 2012, table VI.F8 (intermediate
assumptions), available on the SSA website at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/OACT/TR/2012/lr6f8.html.
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Social Security: Trust Fund Investment Practices

trust funds. In practice, however, open market purchases have been rare. Although the trust funds
have held public issues in the past, the trust funds currently hold special issues only.3
The interest earned on these holdings is credited to the trust funds semiannually (on June 30 and
December 31), and it is done by issuing additional federal securities to the trust funds. In calendar
year 2012, net interest totaled $109.1 billion.4 The effective annual rate of interest earned on all
obligations held by the trust funds in calendar year 2012 was 4.1%.5 The interest rate earned on
special issues purchased by the trust funds in March 2013 is 1.500%.6
The maturity dates of newly issued special issues are set by a standardized procedure. Revenues
are invested immediately in short-term issues called certificates of indebtedness, which mature on
June 30 of each year. On June 30, certificates of indebtedness that have not been redeemed are
reinvested in longer-term special issue bonds. The maturities of these bonds range from 1 to 15
years—the goal is to have about one-fifteenth of them mature each year. This means that the
average maturity of these long-term bonds is about 7½ years.
Issues
While some critics have questioned whether the current investment policy has constrained the
earnings of the trust funds, over the years various advisory councils, congressional committees,
and other groups generally have endorsed it. It has been justified as a way to ensure safety of
principal and stability of interest, and as a way to avoid intrusion into private markets. It also has
been regarded as a way to avoid the political influences that would be inherent in investing
outside the U.S. government. Generally, the goal espoused has been to place the trust funds in the
same position as any long-term investor seeking a safe rate of return by investing in U.S.
securities, and neither advantage nor disadvantage the trust funds relative to these investors or
other parts of the government.
For most of the program’s history, interest income to the trust funds has not been a major factor in
program financing. In recent years, however, the increasing role of interest income, as well as
interest by some policymakers in preventing any surplus Social Security tax revenues from being
used for other government spending purposes, have focused attention on alternative investment
practices.7 For example, there have been proposals to replace the special issues held by the trust

3 The DI trust fund held a small amount of public issues until February 2005. At the end of calendar year 2004, public
issues represented about 0.002% of total investments held by the trust funds. Data on investments held by the trust
funds are available on the SSA website at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/ProgData/investheld.html.
4 Data on trust fund receipts, including net interest, are available on the SSA website at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/
STATS/table4a3.html#income.
5 Data on effective interest rates earned on assets held by the trust funds are available on the SSA website at
http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/ProgData/effectiveRates.html.
6 Data on nominal interest rates earned on special issues purchased by the trust funds are available on the SSA website
at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/ProgData/newIssueRates.html.
7 The Social Security trust funds ran annual cash flow surpluses from 1984 to 2009. Beginning in 2010, annual cash
flow deficits emerged. In April 2012, the Social Security Board of Trustees projected that the Social Security trust
funds will run annual cash flow deficits in 2012 and each year thereafter through the end of the 75-year projection
period (under the intermediate assumptions). For more information on the Trustees’ projections, see The 2012 Annual
Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Federal Disability Insurance Trust
Funds, April 23, 2012, at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/OACT/TR/2012/. In addition, see CRS Report RL33028,
Social Security: The Trust Fund, by Dawn Nuschler and Gary Sidor.
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Social Security: Trust Fund Investment Practices

funds with marketable federal securities, as well as proposals to allow any surplus Social Security
tax revenues or a portion of trust fund reserves to be invested in assets other than U.S.
government obligations, including equities.

Author Contact Information

Dawn Nuschler

Specialist in Income Security
dnuschler@crs.loc.gov, 7-6283


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