The past year saw the biggest loss of the decade as increases in
living expenses outpaced the cost-of-living adjustment
Jun
21, 2018 @ 3:12 pm
Social Security
benefits have lost more than one-third of their buying power since 2000,
according to a new study released Thursday by The Senior Citizens League, a
nonpartisan advocacy group.
"This is the
biggest loss of buying power recorded
since 2012, and that was the biggest loss that The Senior Citizens League's
study has recorded to date," said study author Mary Johnson, a Social
Security policy analyst for the organization.
The study's
findings represent a significant one-year loss in buying power of 4% from
January 2017 to January 2018, boosting the loss since the beginning of the
decade from 30% last year to 34% this year.
The loss in buying
power occurred even though Social Security recipients received a 2% annual
cost-of-living adjustment in Social Security benefits this year. Housing and
medical costs — particularly home heating expenses and Medigap premiums — were
among the fastest rising costs over the past year.
Based on consumer
price index data through May, Ms. Johnson estimates that the COLA for 2019 will
be about 3.3% — the highest since 2012. However, that number could change as
there are still four months of data to be collected before the Social Security
Administration announces the 2019 COLA in October.
In most cases,
Medicare Part B premiums, which pay for outpatient services and doctors' fees,
are deducted directly from monthly Social Security benefits. In 2018, increased
Medicare premiums nearly wiped out the Social
Security COLA for most beneficiaries.
More than 1,000
respondents participated in the annual senior survey, which was conducted from
January through March. More than half of the respondents — 56% — said their
monthly expenses have increased by more than $79 since last year, while their
Social Security benefits, after deducting Medicare Part B premiums, increased
by less than $5 per month.
"When costs
climb more rapidly than benefits, retirees must spend down retirement savings
more quickly than expected and those without savings or other retirement income
are either going into debt of going without," Ms. Johnson said.
Since 2000, Social
Security COLAs increased benefits by 46%, while typical senior expenses have
nearly doubled, according to The Senior Citizens League's study. It found that
a person receiving the national average Social Security benefit of $816 per
month in 2000 would have seen that increase to $1,193 per month by 2018.
However, because retirees' costs are rising more quickly than COLAs, that
individual would need a Social Security benefit of $1,603 per month in 2018
just to maintain his or her level of buying power in 2000.
A majority of the
60 million seniors and disabled Americans who receive Social Security depend on
it for at least half of their total income, and one-third of beneficiaries rely
on it for 90% or more of their income.
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