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2008 COLA Lowest
in 4 Years!
Social Security COLA Rises Modestly
By Martin Crutsinger
October, 2007
WASHINGTON (AP) Come January, Social Security benefits for
nearly 50 million Americans are going up 2.3 percent, the smallest
increase in four years. It will mean an extra $24 per month in the
average check, the government announced Wednesday.
The cost of living adjustment means that the monthly benefit for
the typical retired worker in 2008 will go from $1,055 currently
to $1,079 next year.
The adjustment, announced by the Social Security Administration,
will go to more than 54 million Americans. Nearly 50 million receive
Social Security benefits and the rest get Supplemental Security
Income payments aimed at helping the poor.
The increase compares with a jump last January of 3.3 percent and
an increase in 2006 of 4.1 percent. The 2006 cost-of-living adjustment
had been the largest in 15 years.
The adjustment each year is based on the change in consumer prices
from the July-September quarter of this year compared with the same
period in the previous year. Benefit payments have been tied to
inflation since 1975.
The big jump for 2006 occurred because energy prices had soared
in September of 2005, reflecting the impact of Hurricane Katrina.
This year, however, energy prices have been coming down in recent
months after spiking in the spring.
With oil prices surging this week to highs above $88 per barrel,
analysts believe consumers will get socked with higher gasoline
prices in the months ahead, but those gains will come too late to
influence the new cost-of-living adjustment. The Energy Department
already is predicting that most Americans will pay a lot more to
heat their homes this winter.
Also, the cost of food products has been rising much more sharply
this year than last, reflecting increased use of corn in ethanol
fuel; and as usual, medical costs, which fall heavily on the elderly,
have been outpacing gains in other CPI categories.
But energy, food and medical prices have been offset by a moderation
in prices in categories that the elderly buy less of such as computers,
consumer electronics and clothing.
"Social Security recipients are going to feel like they are
getting squeezed," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's
Economy.com. "For most households out buying gasoline and a
loaf of bread, it feels like inflation is high."
Part of the Social Security increase will be eaten up by a rise
in the cost of Medicare, the giant health care program that covers
the elderly and disabled. The government announced earlier this
month that Medicare premiums will rise 3.1 percent next year, or
$2.50, to $96.40 per month.
While that is the lowest Medicare increase in six years, the good
news is likely to be temporary because Congress is expected to reject
current plans to make doctors take a 10 percent cut in their reimbursement
rates. If doctors escape that reduction, it will mean Medicare premiums
will have to rise more quickly in future years to reflect the program's
higher costs.
The Social Security Administration on Monday had a ceremony to
highlight the opening wave of baby boomer retirements, a generation
of 78 million people born from 1946 to 1964. The first of those
boomers will turn 62 next year, making them eligible for Social
Security benefits.
An estimated 10,000 people a day will become eligible for Social
Security benefits over the next two decades, putting a severe strain
on the pension program.
If no changes are made, the Social Security trust fund is projected
to deplete its reserves in 2041. Even sooner, in 2017, Social Security
is scheduled to start paying out more in benefits than it collects
each year in payroll taxes. Medicare is facing even greater funding
problems because of the rapidly rising cost of health care.
President Bush pledged to make overhauling Social Security the
top priority of his second term, but his plan to provide private
accounts for younger workers went nowhere in Congress, and Republicans
and Democrats remain deadlocked on the issue.
A coalition named Divided We Fail has been pressing to make entitlement
reform a major issue in the presidential campaign, hoping to force
candidates in both parties to address the need for changes in entitlement
programs.
"We want to get all of the candidates on the record and we
want to let voters make up their own minds," said Jim Dau,
an official with AARP, an advocacy group for people 50 and older.
SOURCE The Associated Press
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