The Delaware Gazette

Social Security to hand out first raises since ‘09

STEPHEN OHLEMACHER

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Social Secu­rity recip­i­ents will get a raise in Jan­u­ary — their first increase in ben­e­fits since 2009. It’s expected to be about 3.5 percent.

Some 55 mil­lion ben­e­fi­cia­ries will find out for sure Wednes­day when a gov­ern­ment infla­tion mea­sure that deter­mines the annual cost-of-living adjust­ment is released.

Con­gress adopted the mea­sure in the 1970s, and since then it has resulted in annual ben­e­fit increases aver­ag­ing 4.2 per­cent. But there was no COLA in 2010 or 2011 because infla­tion was too low. That was small com­fort to the mil­lions of retirees and dis­abled peo­ple who have seen retire­ment accounts dwin­dle and home val­ues drop dur­ing the period of eco­nomic weak­ness, said David Cert­ner, leg­isla­tive pol­icy direc­tor for the AARP.

“Peo­ple cer­tainly feel like they are falling behind, and these are mod­est income folks to begin with, so every dol­lar counts,” Cert­ner said. “I think some­times peo­ple for­get what seniors’ incomes are.”

Some of the increase in Jan­u­ary will be lost to higher Medicare pre­mi­ums, which are deducted from Social Secu­rity pay­ments. Medicare Part B pre­mi­ums for 2012 are expected to be announced next week, and the trustees who over­see the pro­gram are pro­ject­ing an increase.

Monthly Social Secu­rity pay­ments aver­age $1,082, or about $13,000 a year. A 3.5 per­cent increase would amount to an addi­tional $38 a month, or about $455 a year.

Most retirees rely on Social Secu­rity for a major­ity of their income, accord­ing to the Social Secu­rity Admin­is­tra­tion. Many rely on it for more than 90 per­cent of their income.

Fed­eral law requires the pro­gram to base annual pay­ment increases on the Con­sumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earn­ers and Cler­i­cal Work­ers (CPI-W). Offi­cials com­pare infla­tion in the third quar­ter of each year — the months of July, August and Sep­tem­ber — with the same months in the pre­vi­ous year.

If con­sumer prices increases from year to year, Social Secu­rity recip­i­ents auto­mat­i­cally get higher pay­ments, start­ing the next Jan­u­ary. If price changes are neg­a­tive, the pay­ments stay unchanged.

Only twice since 1975 — the past two years — has there been no COLA.

Wednesday’s COLA announce­ment will come as a spe­cial joint com­mit­tee of Con­gress weighs options to reduce the fed­eral government’s $1.3 tril­lion bud­get deficit. In talks this sum­mer, Pres­i­dent Barack Obama floated the idea of adopt­ing a new mea­sure of infla­tion to cal­cu­late the COLA, one that would reduce the annual increases.

Advo­cates for seniors mounted an aggres­sive cam­paign against the pro­posal, and it was scrapped. But it could resur­face in the ongo­ing talks.

“We’re very con­cerned about that,” said Web Phillips of the National Com­mit­tee to Pre­serve Social Secu­rity and Medicare. “I think that what this illus­trates is the dan­gers of try­ing to make Social Secu­rity pol­icy in the con­text of deficit reduction.”

Social Secu­rity pay­ments increased by 5.8 per­cent in 2009, the largest increase in 27 years, after energy prices spiked in 2008. But energy prices quickly dropped and home prices became soft in mar­kets across the coun­try, con­tribut­ing to lower infla­tion the past two years.

For exam­ple, aver­age gaso­line prices topped $4 a gal­lon in the sum­mer of 2008. But by Jan­u­ary 2009, they had fallen below $2. Today, the national aver­age is about $3.46 a gallon.

“A lot of that increase had to do with energy,” Polina Vlasenko, an econ­o­mist at the Amer­i­can Insti­tute for Eco­nomic Research, based in Great Bar­ring­ton, Mass., said of the 2009 change.

As a result, Social Secu­rity recip­i­ents got an increase that was far larger than actual over­all infla­tion. How­ever, they weren’t to get another increase until con­sumer prices exceeded the lev­els mea­sured in 2008.

So far this year, prices have been higher than that, Vlasenko said. Based on con­sumer prices in July and August, the COLA for 2012 would be about 3.5 per­cent. Vlasenko esti­mates the COLA will be from 3.5 per­cent to 3.7 percent.

Advo­cates for seniors say it’s about time.

“If you’ve been at the gro­cery store lately and remem­ber what you used to pay for things, see what you’re pay­ing for things today,” Phillips said. “The cost-of-living adjust­ment makes sure that the Social Secu­rity ben­e­fit that you qual­ify for when you retire or you become dis­abled con­tin­ues to stay cur­rent with prices so that the buy­ing power of your ben­e­fit does not decline over time.”

AP News Posted by on Oct 18 2011. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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