97-8271. Federal Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance; Report of Earnings Under the Social Security Earnings Test  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 63 (Wednesday, April 2, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 15607-15610]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-8271]
    
    
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    SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
    
    20 CFR Part 404
    
    [Regulations No. 4]
    RIN 0960-AE44
    
    
    Federal Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance; Report of 
    Earnings Under the Social Security Earnings Test
    
    AGENCY: Social Security Administration.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule amends our regulations regarding reports of 
    earnings to the Social Security Administration (SSA) required of 
    beneficiaries who work and earn more than the applicable exempt amount. 
    Beneficiaries under age 70, who work and earn more than the applicable 
    exempt amount, are required by law to report their earnings to SSA 
    within three months and 15 days following the close of their tax year 
    (usually April 15). As a result of our ongoing efforts both to improve 
    customer service and to reduce the public's paperwork burden, we are 
    changing our regulations to state that we can accept the W-2 report 
    filed by the employer with SSA, and/or the self-employment income tax 
    return filed by the beneficiary with the Internal Revenue Service 
    (IRS), as the report of earnings. We will use the information (wages 
    and net earnings from self-employment) contained in those reports 
    together with other pertinent information to adjust benefits under the 
    earnings test.
    
    DATES: This final rule is effective April 2, 1997.
    
    
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    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Augustine, Division of 
    Regulations and Rulings, Social Security Administration, 6401 Security 
    Blvd., Baltimore, MD 21235, (410) 966-5121. For information on 
    eligibility, claiming benefits, or coverage of earnings, call our 
    national toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the Social Security earnings test set 
    out in section 203 of the Social Security Act (the Act), benefits are 
    reduced if the annual earnings of a beneficiary (receiving other than 
    disability benefits), under age 70, exceed certain exempt amounts. The 
    exempt amounts are established by law. Individuals who are entitled to 
    a monthly benefit (other than a disability benefit) during the year and 
    who earn over the exempt amount are required to file a report of 
    earnings with the SSA within three months and 15 days following the 
    close of their tax year (usually April 15). The reports may be filed on 
    a form prescribed by SSA, or in person, or by telephone. The report may 
    be filed by someone other than the beneficiary, provided the report 
    contains the required information. Failure to file a report as required 
    will result in a monetary penalty, unless we find that there was good 
    cause for filing late. There are 330,833 public reporting burden hours 
    associated with the completion and filing of these annual earnings 
    reports.
        Working beneficiaries are also required to report their income to 
    the IRS during the same time period. SSA receives and processes W-2 
    information from employers. We also receive limited information from 
    IRS from individual self-employment income tax returns that are filed. 
    Wages and net-earnings from self-employment are ``posted'' to 
    individual earnings records as part of our mission to maintain accurate 
    earnings records for benefit payment. Until recently, we have been 
    unable to use the earnings information we receive from W-2 forms and 
    self-employment tax returns as the annual report because it took 
    several years for SSA to receive and process the earnings information 
    from the W-2 forms and the tax returns. For that reason, we provided in 
    Sec. 404.452(b) of our regulations that the filing of tax returns with 
    the IRS was not such a report as is required to be filed for the annual 
    earnings test, even where the tax returns showed the same wages and net 
    earnings from self-employment that must be reported to us for purposes 
    of the annual earnings test. Although SSA was unable to use earnings 
    information from W-2 forms and self-employment tax returns to adjust 
    benefits on a timely basis, we have traditionally used this information 
    as a check to ensure beneficiary compliance with the reporting 
    requirements of the annual earnings test.
        Recent improvements in employer reporting practices and in SSA's 
    Annual Wage Reporting (AWR) process have made it feasible and desirable 
    for SSA to change its process for obtaining earnings information from 
    working beneficiaries. For the majority of beneficiaries, information 
    from the W-2 report and/or the self-employment tax return is now 
    processed quickly enough that it is sufficient to serve as the ``annual 
    report'' without need for further action by the beneficiary. Therefore, 
    as part of the ``reinventing government'' initiative and in order to 
    reduce the reporting burden on the public, improve customer service and 
    save administrative costs, we are revising Sec. 404.452 to state that 
    the form W-2 filed by the employer with SSA and/or the self-employment 
    income tax return filed by beneficiaries with IRS may serve as the 
    annual report of earnings. Because of this change, SSA will no longer 
    print and mail Annual Report of Earnings forms. For most beneficiaries, 
    the process will be totally automated, with SSA receiving and 
    processing earnings information reported for tax purposes and using 
    that information in conjunction with other relevant information to 
    adjust the Social Security benefits payable accordingly.
        Certain situations will require more information than is contained 
    on the form W-2 and self-employment income tax return. When these 
    situations occur, a beneficiary will still have to contact SSA to 
    provide the information in order to ensure the correct amount of 
    benefits are paid, unless the information was otherwise provided to us. 
    In addition, some beneficiaries may wish to file a report directly with 
    SSA, in order to have their benefits adjusted sooner. (Most adjustments 
    now occur during the period February through May, based on reports 
    filed directly with us, but would take place June through October if 
    based on reports filed through IRS). In these instances, we will accept 
    a report of earnings in writing, in person, or over the telephone, from 
    beneficiaries who still need or wish to file a report.
        For example, under IRS regulations, wages are reported on forms W-2 
    for the year in which they are paid. Under the Social Security earnings 
    test, wages are counted for the year in which services are performed. 
    Therefore, if the form W-2 shows wages that were earned in a year or 
    years prior to the year for which the report is made, e.g., deferred 
    compensation, the beneficiary will need to report to us the correct 
    amount of earnings for the year reported.
        There is a similar provision for the self-employed (applicable to 
    years after the initial year of entitlement) that may require contact 
    when no services have been performed in the year for which net earnings 
    from self-employment are reported. Furthermore, in the year in which 
    the monthly earnings test applies (frequently the year of retirement), 
    a beneficiary who has not already done so will need to provide monthly 
    earnings information to SSA that cannot be discerned from the form W-2 
    or the self-employment income tax return.
        Additional examples of situations where other pertinent information 
    must be provided are:
         The beneficiary earned wages above the exempt amount and 
    also had a net loss from self-employment;
         There were wages reported on a W-2 that will be included 
    on a self-employment tax return (e.g., ministers and certain church 
    workers);
         The beneficiary is self-employed and reports earnings on a 
    fiscal year basis which is not the calendar year;
         The beneficiary had Federal agricultural program payments 
    or income from carry-over crops that is included on the SE return;
         The beneficiary estimated earnings over the exempt amount 
    and some benefits were withheld, but there were no earnings for the 
    year, i.e., no wages reported, no self-employment.
        SSA already has methods of collecting some of the supplemental 
    information needed to correctly adjust benefits under the earnings test 
    when that information is needed. Much of the information can be 
    gathered in the initial claims process. We also work with employers and 
    payroll groups to have them report directly to us certain payments that 
    should not be counted under the earnings test. We will continue to use 
    these methods as well as develop other means to obtain supplemental 
    information needed to correctly adjust benefits without a separate 
    report of earnings from the beneficiary. We will provide an explanation 
    of the process during the claims interview, and we will provide written 
    information through our public information materials that will allow 
    beneficiaries to understand what earnings should be counted under the 
    earnings test and the situations in which we would need additional 
    information. When we adjust benefits based on the earnings posted to 
    the beneficiary's record, we will, in our notice to the beneficiary, 
    provide full information regarding the earnings that we used and the 
    situations in which those earnings
    
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    may not be correct. This will ensure that beneficiaries have full 
    knowledge of our actions. Our notice will also tell beneficiaries how 
    to obtain a reconsideration of our determination if they feel we were 
    wrong, and will advise them of their responsibility to give us any 
    further information that could be pertinent to their benefit 
    adjustment.
        It should be noted that we are not revising our regulations 
    regarding extension of time for filing a report (Sec. 404.452(f)). The 
    deadline for filing employer reports (W-2 forms) is well within the 
    timeframes for required annual reports. In relying on these, as well as 
    the SE tax return information, SSA will assume that posted earnings are 
    based on timely filed reports. However, when a beneficiary requests an 
    extension of time from IRS for filing a self-employment tax return, the 
    beneficiary must either file a timely report of earnings with SSA, or 
    request an extension of time for filing such a report from SSA. An 
    extension granted by IRS will not be considered an extension of time 
    granted by SSA.
        This change in our rules will result in improved service to our 
    beneficiaries. First, this final rule will reduce the burden associated 
    with the double filing of information with both SSA and IRS. Second, 
    SSA will be able to shift resources devoted to the solicitation and 
    processing of reports from beneficiaries under the current annual 
    report process to other priority workloads, such as processing claims 
    for benefits and responding to telephone inquiries. Finally, this rule 
    supports the President's request in his remarks on May 22, 1995 on 
    signing the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, that agencies review their 
    regulations with the goal of reducing by half the frequency of reports 
    required from citizens. This final rule will eliminate the annual 
    report of earnings form and the need for most working beneficiaries to 
    file a separate report of earnings with SSA, resulting in a savings of 
    up to 330,833 public burden hours each year.
        We are also revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of Sec. 404.452 
    by changing age 72 to age 70. These revisions reflect the statutory 
    change in the Social Security Amendments of 1977 that reduced from age 
    72 to 70, the age at which beneficiaries become exempt from the annual 
    earnings test. This change was originally scheduled to take effect in 
    1982 but, due to a provision in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act 
    of 1981, it did not become effective until 1983. Since the statutory 
    provisions were self-implementing, we exempted working beneficiaries 
    age 70 and over from the annual earnings test beginning in 1983. 
    However, we have not previously updated this regulation to take account 
    of this statutory change.
        This regulation was published in the Federal Register (62 FR 349) 
    as a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) on January 3, 1997. 
    Interested parties were given 30 days to submit comments. No public 
    comments were received. We are, therefore, publishing this final rule 
    with no changes from the proposed rule.
    
    Regulatory Procedures
    
        Pursuant to section 702(a)(5) of the Act, 42 U.S.C. 902(a)(5), as 
    amended by section 102 of Public Law 103-296, SSA follows the 
    Administrative Procedure Act (APA) rulemaking procedures specified in 5 
    U.S.C. 553 in the development of its regulations. The APA provides in 5 
    U.S.C. 553(d)(1) for an exception to the requirement for a 30-day delay 
    in the effective date of a substantive rule if the rule grants or 
    recognizes an exemption or relieves a restriction. As indicated above, 
    this final rule will eliminate the annual report of earnings form and 
    exempt most working beneficiaries from the requirement to file a 
    separate report of earnings with SSA. This will result in a savings of 
    up to 330,833 public reporting burden hours each year and, by allowing 
    us to divert scarce resources to other priority workloads, enable us to 
    provide better overall service to the public. In light of these 
    considerations, we find that it is in the public interest to make this 
    rule effective upon publication.
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has reviewed this rule 
    and determined that it meets the criteria for a significant regulatory 
    action within the meaning of Executive Order 12866. As indicated 
    earlier in this preamble, failure to file a timely report of earnings 
    will result in a monetary penalty, unless we find that there was good 
    cause for filing late. Since, for most beneficiaries, the W-2 and/or 
    self-employment tax return information will be considered the annual 
    report of earnings required by section 203(f) of the Act, we anticipate 
    that there will be very few penalties imposed on beneficiaries for 
    failing to report their earnings. The loss of penalty dollars is 
    estimated to be $60-75 million for the 5-year period of fiscal years 
    1997 through 2001. However, we believe that the loss of penalty income 
    should not be given undue consideration because this income results 
    from beneficiaries' failure to timely report their earnings to SSA. It 
    has always been the goal of SSA to achieve maximum reporting compliance 
    and if this goal was achieved, there would be no penalties imposed. 
    Furthermore, we believe that the loss of penalty revenue is more than 
    offset by the benefits that both the public and SSA will realize under 
    this rule. These benefits include the fact that up to 1.3 million 
    beneficiaries will no longer be required to complete the annual report 
    of earnings forms resulting in a reduction in the public reporting 
    burden of up to 330,833 hours. In addition, this initiative will shift 
    the annual report workload from SSA's peak workload period (January 
    through March) until later in the year and thus, will allow SSA to 
    divert scarce resources to other priority workloads, such as processing 
    claims for benefits and responding to telephone inquiries, resulting in 
    better overall service to the public.
        Administrative savings for this initiative are estimated to be 540 
    workyears and $23.2 million for fiscal years 1997 through 2001.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        We certify that this final rule will not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities since it 
    affects only individuals. Therefore, a regulatory flexibility analysis 
    as provided in Public Law 96-354, the Regulatory Flexibility Act, is 
    not required.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This final regulation will impose no new reporting or recordkeeping 
    requirements requiring OMB clearance. As indicated in the NPRM, we 
    estimate that this new Annual Report of Earnings process will reduce 
    the annual public reporting burden by up to 330,833 hours. This is the 
    annual reporting burden associated with the completion and filing of 
    forms SSA-777 and SSA-7770 (OMB Control Number 0960-0057). Although 
    this final regulation will eliminate those forms, SSA will continue to 
    collect earnings information, through a number of other collection 
    instruments already approved by OMB. In most cases, we will obtain this 
    information through forms W-2 and schedule SEs approved for use by IRS. 
    In those cases where additional information is required, we expect to 
    obtain that information during the initial claims interview through 
    forms approved for use by SSA (primarily the SSA-1 (Application for 
    Retirement Benefits; OMB Approval Number 0960-0007) and the SSA-795 
    (Statement of Claimant or Other Person; OMB Approval Number 0960-
    0045)). In addition, OMB has approved a new
    
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    form, SSA-131, OMB Number 0960-0566, to collect the additional 
    information needed to correctly adjust benefits in special wage payment 
    situations.
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program Nos. 96.001 Social 
    Security--Disability Insurance; 96.002 Social Security--Retirement 
    Insurance; 96.004 Social Security--Survivors Insurance)
    
    List of Subjects in 20 CFR Part 404
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Blind, Disability benefits, 
    Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, Social security.
    
        Dated: March 10, 1997.
    John J. Callahan,
    Acting Commissioner of Social Security.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, part 404 of chapter III of 
    title 20 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 404--FEDERAL OLD-AGE, SURVIVORS AND DISABILITY INSURANCE
    
        1. The authority citation for subpart E of part 404 continues to 
    read as follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 202, 203, 204 (a) and (e), 205 (a) and (c), 
    222(b), 223(e), 224, 225, and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security Act 
    (42 U.S.C. 402, 403, 404 (a) and (e), 405 (a) and (c), 422(b), 
    423(e), 424a, 425, and 902(a)(5)).
    
        2. Section 404.452 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and 
    (a)(2), revising the last sentence of paragraph (b), and revising 
    paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 404.452  Reports to Social Security Administration of earnings; 
    wages; net earnings from self-employment.
    
        (a) * * *
        (1) The individual attained the age of 70 in or before the first 
    month of entitlement to benefits in the taxable year, or
        (2) The individual's benefit payments were suspended under the 
    provisions described in Sec. 404.456 for all months in a taxable year 
    in which the individual was entitled to benefits and was under age 70.
        (b) * * * The filing of an income tax return or a form W-2 with the 
    Internal Revenue Service may serve as the report required to be filed 
    under the provisions of this section where the income tax return or 
    form W-2 shows the same wages and net earnings from self-employment 
    that must be reported to the Administration under this section.
    * * * * *
        (d) Information to be provided to us. The report should show the 
    name and social security claim number of the beneficiary about whom the 
    report is made; identify the taxable year for which the report is made; 
    show the total amount of wages for which the beneficiary rendered 
    services during the taxable year (if applicable), the amount of net 
    earnings from self-employment for such year (if applicable); and show 
    the name and address of the individual making the report. To overcome 
    the presumption that the beneficiary rendered services for wages 
    exceeding the allowable amount and rendered substantial services in 
    self-employment in each month (see Sec. 404.435), we must also be told 
    the specific months in which the beneficiary did not render services in 
    employment for wages of more than the allowable amount (as described in 
    Sec. 404.435) and did not render substantial services in self-
    employment (as described in Secs. 404.446 and 404.447).
    * * * * *
    [FR Doc. 97-8271 Filed 4-1-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4190-29-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/2/1997
Published:
04/02/1997
Department:
Social Security Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-8271
Dates:
This final rule is effective April 2, 1997.
Pages:
15607-15610 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Regulations No. 4
RINs:
0960-AE44: Elimination of Mandatory Annual Earnings Reports (592P)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0960-AE44/elimination-of-mandatory-annual-earnings-reports-592p-
PDF File:
97-8271.pdf
CFR: (3)
20 CFR 404.435)
20 CFR 404.452(b)
20 CFR 404.452