20 C.F.R. § 404.1918
(a) General. Unless otherwise provided in an agreement, benefits will be computed in accordance with this section. Benefits payable under an agreement are based on a pro rata primary insurance amount (PIA), which we determine as follows:
(b) Establishing a theoretical earnings record.
(1) To establish a worker's theoretical earnings record, we divide his or her U.S. earnings in each year credited with at least one U.S. QC by the average of the total wages of all workers for that year and express the quotient as a percentage. For the years 1937 through 1950, the average of the total wages is as follows:
| Year | Average of the total wages of all workers |
|---|---|
| 1937 | $1,137.96 |
| 1938 | 1,053.24 |
| 1939 | 1,142.36 |
| 1940 | 1,195.00 |
| 1941 | 1,276.04 |
| 1942 | 1,454.28 |
| 1943 | 1,713.52 |
| 1944 | 1,936.32 |
| 1945 | 2,021.40 |
| 1946 | 1,891.76 |
| 1947 | 2,175.32 |
| 1948 | 2,361.64 |
| 1949 | 2,483.20 |
| 1950 | 2,543.96 |
(d) Determining the pro rata PIA. We then determine a pro rata PIA from the theoretical PIA. The pro rata PIA is the product of—
(2) The ratio of the worker's actual number of U.S. QC's to the number of calendar quarters in the worker's coverage lifetime. A coverage lifetime means the worker's benefit computation years as determined under § 404.211(e), § 404.221(c), or § 404.241(d).
Example 1:C attains age 62 in 1982 and needs 31 QC's to be insured. C worked under the U.S. system from July 1, 1974 to December 31, 1980 and therefore has only 6 1/2 years during which he worked under the U.S. system (26 QC's). C, however, has worked under the Social Security system of a foreign country that is party to a totalization agreement, and his total U.S. and foreign work, combined as described in § 404.1908, equals more than 31 QC's. Thus, the combined coverage gives C insured status. The benefit is computed as follows: Step 1: Establish C's theoretical earnings record:The following table shows: (1) C's actual U.S. covered earnings for each year, (2) the average of the total wages of all workers for that year and (3) the ratio of (1) to (2): Year QC's C's actual U.S. covered earnings National average wage Percentage ratio of (1) to (2) (1) (2) (3) 1974 2 $2,045.08 $8,030.76 25.46558 1975 4 7,542.00 8,630.92 87.38350 1976 4 9,016.00 9,226.48 97.71874 1977 4 9,952.00 9,779.44 101.76452 1978 4 10,924.00 10,556.03 103.48587 1979 4 12,851.00 11,479.46 111.94777 1980 4 11,924.00 12,513.46 95.28939 C's REP is the average of the ratios in column 3, adjusted to take account of the fact that C had only 2 QC's in 1974. Thus, the REP equals the sum of the figures in column 3 (623.05537), divided by the total number of C's QC's (26) and multiplied by 4, or 95.85467 percent. Since C attained age 62 in 1982, his computation base years are 1951 through 1981. To establish his theoretical earnings record we use 95.85467 percent of the national average wage for each of the years 1951 through 1981. Since national average wage data is not available for 1981, for that year we attribute 95.85467 percent of the national average wage for 1980 or $11,994.74. His theoretical earnings record would look like this: 1951 $2,683.13 1952 2,850.07 1953 3,009.30 1954 3,024.83 1955 3,164.58 1956 3,385.93 1957 3,490.76 1958 3,521.51 1959 3,695.96 1960 3,841.01 1961 3,917.35 1962 4,113.51 1963 4,214.38 1964 4,386.62 1965 4,465.60 1966 4,733.65 1967 4,997.33 1968 5,340.79 1969 5,649.44 1970 5,929.80 1971 6,227.75 1972 6,838.08 1973 7,265.94 1974 7,697.86 1975 8,273.14 1976 8,844.01 1977 9,374.05 1978 10,118.45 1979 11,003.60 1980 11,994.74 1981 11,994.74 Step 2: Compute the theoretical PIA: Since C attains age 62 in 1982, we determine his theoretical PIA using an AIME computation. In applying the AIME computation, we index each year's earnings on the theoretical earnings record in accordance with § 404.211(d). In this example, the theoretical PIA is $453. Step 3: Compute the pro rata PIA: Theoretical PIA − Actual U.S. QC's calendar quarters in benefit computation years $453 − 26 QC's (61⁄2 years) 104 quarters (26 years) = $113.20 pro rata PIA
Example 2:M needs 27 QC's to be insured, but she has only 3 years of work (12 QC's) under the U.S. system. M has enough foreign work, however, to be insured. She attained age 62 in 1978, and her U.S. covered earnings were in 1947, 1948 and 1949. Based on M's date of birth, her theoretical PIA can be computed, in accordance with § 404.220, under a new start method. If M's earnings in 1947, 1948, and 1949 were 50 percent, 60 percent and 70 percent, respectively, of the average wage for each year, her REP would be 60 percent. For each year in the computation period, 60 percent of the average wage for that year will be attributed as M's assumed earnings. The theoretical PIA will then be computed as described in §§ 404.220 through 404.222. To determine M's pro rata PIA, the theoretical PIA will be multiplied by the ratio of the actual number of U.S. QC's to the number of calendar quarters in the benefit computation years. There are 22 benefit computation years, or 88 quarters. The pro rata PIA would, therefore, be 12/88 × theoretical PIA.
(e) Rounding of benefits.
[49 FR 29775, July 24, 1984]