The Delaware Gazette

Social Security benefits to go up by 1.7 percent

STEPHEN OHLEMACHER

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — More than 56 mil­lion Social Secu­rity recip­i­ents will see their monthly pay­ments go up by 1.7 per­cent next year.

The increase, which starts in Jan­u­ary, is tied to a mea­sure of infla­tion released Tues­day. It shows that infla­tion has been rel­a­tively low over the past year, despite the recent surge in gas prices, result­ing in one of the small­est increases in Social Secu­rity pay­ments since auto­matic adjust­ments were adopted in 1975.

Social Secu­rity pay­ments for retired work­ers aver­age $1,237 a month, or about $14,800 a year. A 1.7 per­cent increase will amount to about $21 a month, or $252 a year, on average.

Social Secu­rity recip­i­ents received a 3.6 per­cent increase in ben­e­fits this year after get­ting none the pre­vi­ous two years.

About 8 mil­lion peo­ple who receive Sup­ple­men­tal Secu­rity Income will also receive the cost-of-living adjust­ment, or COLA, mean­ing the announce­ment will affect about 1 in 5 U.S. residents.

Social Secu­rity also pro­vides ben­e­fits to mil­lions of dis­abled work­ers, spouses, wid­ows, wid­ow­ers and children.

“The annual COLA is crit­i­cally impor­tant to the finan­cial secu­rity of the (56) mil­lion Amer­i­cans receiv­ing Social Secu­rity ben­e­fits today,” said Nancy Lea­Mond, AARP’s exec­u­tive vice pres­i­dent. “Amid ris­ing costs for food, util­i­ties and health care and con­tin­ued eco­nomic uncer­tainty, the COLA helps mil­lions of older Amer­i­cans main­tain their stan­dard of liv­ing, keep­ing many out of poverty.”

The amount of wages sub­jected to Social Secu­rity taxes is going up, too. Social Secu­rity is sup­ported by a 12.4 per­cent tax on wages up to $110,100. That thresh­old will increase to $113,700 next year, result­ing in higher taxes for nearly 10 mil­lion work­ers and their employ­ers, accord­ing to the Social Secu­rity Administration.

Half the tax is paid by work­ers and the other half is paid by employ­ers. Con­gress and Pres­i­dent Barack Obama reduced the share paid by work­ers from 6.2 per­cent to 4.2 per­cent for 2011 and 2012. The tem­po­rary cut, how­ever, is due to expire at the end of the year.

Some of next year’s COLA could be wiped out by higher Medicare pre­mi­ums, which are deducted from Social Secu­rity pay­ments. The Medicare Part B pre­mium, which cov­ers doc­tor vis­its, is expected to rise by about $7 per month for 2013, accord­ing to gov­ern­ment projections.

The pre­mium is cur­rently $99.90 a month for most seniors. Medicare is expected to announce the pre­mium for 2013 in the com­ing weeks.

“If seniors are get­ting a low COLA, much of their increase will go to pay off their Medicare Part B pre­mium,” said Mary John­son, a pol­icy ana­lyst at The Senior Cit­i­zens League.

By law, the increase in ben­e­fits is based on the Con­sumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earn­ers and Cler­i­cal Work­ers, or CPI-W, a broad mea­sure of con­sumer prices gen­er­ated by the Bureau of Labor Sta­tis­tics. It mea­sures price changes for food, hous­ing, cloth­ing, trans­porta­tion, energy, med­ical care, recre­ation and education.

Over the past year, hous­ing costs have gone up 1.4 per­cent but home energy costs have dropped by 3.8 per­cent, accord­ing to the CPI-W. Med­ical costs, which tend to hit seniors harder than younger adults, have increased by 4.4 percent.

Gaso­line prices have climbed by 6.8 per­cent, but much of that increase hap­pened in the past month, so it is not fully reflected in the COLA for Social Security.

To cal­cu­late the COLA, the Social Secu­rity Admin­is­tra­tion com­pares the aver­age price index for July, August and Sep­tem­ber with the price index for the same three months in the pre­vi­ous year. The price index for Sep­tem­ber — the final piece of the puz­zle — was released Tuesday.

If con­sumer prices increase from year to year, Social Secu­rity recip­i­ents auto­mat­i­cally get higher pay­ments, start­ing the fol­low­ing Jan­u­ary. If prices drop, the pay­ments stay the same, as they did in 2010 and 2011.

Since 1975, the annual COLA has aver­aged 4.2 per­cent. Only five times has it been below 2 per­cent, includ­ing the two times it was zero. Before 1975, it took an act of Con­gress to increase Social Secu­rity payments.

Most older Amer­i­cans rely on Social Secu­rity for a major­ity of their incomes, accord­ing to the Social Secu­rity Admin­is­tra­tion. Over the past decade, the COLA has helped increase incomes for seniors, even as incomes have dropped for younger workers.

From 2001 to 2011, the median income for all U.S. house­holds fell by 6.6 per­cent, when infla­tion was taken into account, accord­ing to cen­sus data. But the median income for house­holds headed by some­one 65 or older rose by 13 percent.

AP News Posted by on Oct 16 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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