2022 Annual Report of the SSI Program

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II. Highlights
The SSI program is a nationwide Federal assistance program administered by SSA that guarantees a minimum level of income for aged, blind, or disabled individuals. This section presents highlights of recent SSI program experience, a summary of important legislative changes to the program in the last year, a discussion of current issues facing the SSI program, and a summary of the key results from the 25-year projections.
A. Recent Program Experience
SSI program experience during the past year included the following:
During calendar year 2021, 1.2 million individuals applied for SSI benefits based on blindness or disability, a decrease of 7 percent as compared to the 1.3 million who applied in 2020. Additionally, about 146,000 individuals applied for SSI benefits based on age, an increase of 51 percent as compared to the roughly 96,000 who applied in 2020. In 2021, about 529,000 applicants became new recipients of SSI benefits, a decrease of 11 percent as compared to the roughly 597,000 who became new recipients in 2020.
Each month on average during calendar year 2021, 7.7 million individuals received Federal SSI benefits. This group was composed of 1.1 million aged recipients and 6.6 million blind or disabled recipients, of which about 64,000 were blind. Of these 6.6 million blind or disabled recipients, 1.1 million were under age 18, and 1.1 million were aged 65 or older. During calendar year 2021, 8.4 million aged, blind, or disabled individuals received Federal SSI benefits for at least 1 month.
The cost SSA incurred to administer the SSI program in FY 2021 was $4.5 billion, which was roughly 8 percent of total federally administered SSI expenditures.1
B. SSI Legislation Since The 2021 Annual Report
Section 2502 of the Afghanistan Supplemental Appropriations Act, 20222 allows certain citizens or nationals of Afghanistan (or individuals with no nationality who last habitually resided in Afghanistan) to be temporarily eligible for SSI benefits if they:
To be eligible for SSI benefits, these people would also need to meet the other requirements of the SSI program, such as being at least age 65 or disabled or blind, and having countable income and resources below certain limits.
Eligibility for these individuals ends on the later of March 31, 2023 or when the person’s parole period ends.
C. Current Issues Facing The SSI Program
For almost 50 years, the SSI program has provided a financial safety net for aged, blind, and disabled Americans who have nowhere else to turn. The program plays a crucial role in the lives of about eight million people and is funded from general tax revenues. Accordingly, we take great care to administer the program as accurately and efficiently as possible and remain committed to effectively overseeing the program, protecting taxpayer dollars, and maintaining the public’s trust by paying the right person the right benefit at the right time.
Outreach to People Facing Barriers During the Pandemic
The pandemic has imposed hardships on our country’s most vulnerable citizens, many of whom are elderly, have low incomes, have limited English proficiency, face homelessness, or experience mental illness. SSI benefits are a crucial lifeline that not only helps vulnerable people meet their basic needs of food and shelter, but in many places SSI eligibility also serves as a gateway that provides automatic eligibility for other programs, such as Medicaid. SSI applications decreased from their pre-pandemic levels. In response, we have prioritized our outreach to vulnerable populations to ensure the public is aware of and can access SSI and our other benefit programs.
We have worked closely on this effort with a variety of interested parties, including representatives of the non-profit community; health care organizations; private industry; the advocate community; and Federal, State, and local governments. Through our partnerships, these groups help share information about our programs, assist in taking SSI claims, and actively refer individuals potentially eligible for SSI to our field offices.
We have enhanced our communications and online content to further support these efforts. For example, we conducted a national advertising campaign on TV, radio, and social media to bolster our outreach efforts, with special emphasis on children with disabilities. We are also conducting mailed outreach to certain Social Security beneficiaries who may be eligible for SSI, which we started in December 2020. We plan to send an additional 735,000 of these SSI outreach letters over the second half of calendar year 2022.
Online Protective Filing
In March 2022, we released an online tool that allows people to let us know when they or someone else is interested in filing for SSI. We record the date the request is successfully submitted using the tool as the “protective filing date” for the interested person, and we contact them to take their application. A protective filing date is important when a person can’t apply for benefits right away because we may use the protective filing date as the date of the application if the person applies within the provided time frame. This process protects individuals against a loss of benefits.
D. Key Results From The 25-Year Projections
The major findings in the 25-year projections prepared for this report are:

1
Administrative costs do not include the costs of beneficiary services provided to recipients through State vocational rehabilitation (VR) agencies and employment networks for VR services and payments under the Ticket to Work program.

2
Division C in the Extending Government Funding and Delivering Emergency Assistance Act (Public Law 117-43), which was enacted on September 30, 2021.


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