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Caught Up in A Social Security Fuss

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Caught Up in Social Security Fuss at 28

By Catherine Getches

Catherine Getches is a freelance writer in Northern California.

February 12, 2005

I confess that I usually steer clear of senior hotspots such as the post office, drugstore pharmacies,

Hallmark shops and all restaurants that serve dinner at 4 p.m. But when I needed an antibiotic for a tooth

infection, I had no choice. And that's what it took — standing in line for more than 17 minutes at the

Walgreen's pharmacy behind a woman whose wig was slightly askew, using a shopping cart as a walker

and going on about "well, I'll be darned" coincidences — for me to step back and consider what's behind

all the fuss over Social Security.

At first, I tried to keep from rolling my eyes as she went on about the No. 5 (her number in line, the

quantity of prescriptions she was picking up and the age of her grandson). But when she mentioned her

Social Security check and wanting to spoil little David, but barely making ends meet with the cost of all

her "medicines," I had a minor epiphany.

Without someone like P. Diddy and his "Vote or Die"-type campaign on Social Security reform,

thinking about it is as appealing as pondering death. What's more, most people my age don't consider

their number as anything more than a form of ID.

Even with all the fuss over Social Security of late, I admit that my initial inclination was to feel secure.

Doubly secure even, not simply because I'm 28 years old but also (irrationally) because I have

succeeded in safeguarding my original Social Security card.

I figured I could tune out recent debates over President Bush's proposed private savings accounts and

changes to Social Security. Unless you're contemplating retirement, it's pretty easy to entirely overlook

the importance of Social Security. The only reason most people even know their number by heart is

because they have to rattle it off on so many different occasions. Although the Social Security

Administration advises people to "treat your Social Security number as confidential information and

avoid giving it out unnecessarily," if you want hassle-free access to things like utilities, bank accounts,

credit cards, cable TV and your dentist, you better divulge your digits. In the end, the same key code that

gets you "Desperate Housewives" gets you a house loan.

I know this number is ultimately what distinguishes me from every other person on this planet — even if

I change my name and get a complete makeover. But judging by the woman at the pharmacy, the

number is a lot more than that. Many Americans come to a point in their life when the number on that

flimsy card is all they've got.

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Today, one in six Americans receive Social Security benefits. They are not just retirees and their

dependents but also the disabled and their dependents and survivors of deceased workers. For 20% of

65-and-older beneficiaries, it is their only source of income. By the time people who couldn't care less

now reach retirement age, that figure will jump. The last census estimates that by 2011, the 65-and-older

population will grow at a rate four to five times faster than the general population. And by 2030, the

"older generation," as the Census Bureau calls it, will comprise one of every five people. By 2050, 148

million people will be over 65, up from 36 million today, and those under 65 will dwindle to 35 million

from 255 million today.

Economists can go back and forth forever on the issue, but it takes imagining subsisting on Social

Security to really think about whether changes to the system are necessary. In the meantime, I'm trying

to digest what information I can decipher and bracing for when my generation reaches retirement age,

when lines will be even longer at the pharmacy. Let's hope those early-bird restaurants stay cheap.

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.

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Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times

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