How Social Security flipped American poverty
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How Social Security flipped American poverty

In 1935, Franklin Roosevelt signed the Social Security Act into law, creating a program that would fundamentally transform the experience of aging in America. Before Social Security, growing old in the United States almost invariably meant growing poor. The program did not merely provide checks to retirees. It flipped the entire economic relationship between age and poverty, turning what had been an almost guaranteed descent into destitution into something resembling financial security for tens of millions of Americans. The scale of elderly poverty before Social Security is difficult for modern Americans to comprehend. In the early 1930s, more than half of all Americans over sixty-five had incomes below subsistence level. Poorhouses, those grim institutional warehouses for the destitute elderly, were a routine feature of the American landscape. Families who could not support aging parents faced agonizing choices, and elderly Americans who had worked their entire lives routinely ended those lives in humiliating dependency or outright starvation. The political path to Social Security was neither smooth nor inevitable. Conservative opponents denounced it as socialism and predicted it would destroy individual initiative and bankrupt the nation. Southern Democrats demanded that the program exclude agricultural and domestic workers, categories that conveniently encompassed the majority of Black workers in the South. The compromises necessary to pass the legislation left enormous gaps in coverage that would take decades to address. The program's design was deliberately structured to feel like earned insurance rather than welfare. Workers paid into the system through payroll taxes, and benefits were tied to contributions, creating a sense of ownership that made Social Security politically untouchable in ways that means-tested programs never achieved. Roosevelt reportedly said that the payroll tax meant no politician would ever be able to abolish his program, and history proved him correct. This episode examines how a single piece of New Deal legislation reversed centuries of elderly poverty in America, tracing the political battles, racial compromises, and design choices that created the most successful anti-poverty program in American history and reshaped what it means to grow old in the United States.

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