Daily Southtown

Why Social Security’s COLA will see 5.9% jump next year

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — Rising inflation has triggered a sizable increase in Social Security’s annual costof-living adjustment, or COLA, for 2022. The Social Security Administra­tion announced the 5.9% COLA on Wednesday after a Labor Department report on inflation during September.

Over the last 10 years, the Social Security COLA has averaged about 1.7% annually as inflation remained low. But the economic recovery from the coronaviru­s pandemic has triggered rising prices for a wide range of goods and services, and that will translate to bigger checks for retirees.

Q: Why are benefits adjusted?

A: Policymake­rs say the COLA works to preserve the purchasing power of Social Security benefits and shouldn’t be seen as a pay hike for retirees.

At one time Congress had to approve inflation increases, but starting in the mid-1970s lawmakers turned that function over to nonpartisa­n experts within the government bureaucrac­y. The annual review is now tied to changes in an official measure of inflation and proceeds automatica­lly and with no political brinkmansh­ip.

Q: How does the COLA for 2022 measure up?

A: The Great Recession saw a COLA increase of 5.8% for 2009, and next year’s number tops that.

But one has to go back nearly 40 years to find a bigger COLA boost, the 7.4% awarded for 1983.

Next year’s number is still the biggest Social Security hike the vast majority of baby-boomer retirees have seen. Up to now, they’ve collected meager to modest annual adjustment­s, not

counting three years for which there was no COLA because inflation barely showed a pulse.

A 5.9% COLA will increase the average Social Security payment for a retired worker by about $92 a month, to $1,657 next year. This year’s COLA was worth about $20 a month.

Q: What’s changed over the past year?

A: As the economy recovers from the shock of coronaviru­s shutdowns, prices are rising at a good clip.

Gas serves as an ever-present reminder, above $3 a gallon in most states, $4 a gallon in California and Hawaii. But food had already been going up and so are labor costs as employers compete to hire choosy workers seeking higher pay and better benefits. Add to the mix supply chain problems that have slowed deliveries of everything from refrigerat­ors to running shoes.

All that gets sifted into the prices consumers pay for their everyday needs.

Q: Who is affected?

A: The COLA is big enough to have an impact on the overall economy.

It affects the household budgets of about 1 in 5 Americans, including Social

Security recipients, disabled veterans and federal retirees, about 70 million people.

About half of seniors live in households where Social Security benefits account for at least 50% of their income, and one-quarter rely on their monthly payment for all or nearly all their earnings.

Q: Do private pensions also provide a COLA?

A: Inflation protection is central to Social Security’s benefit design, but it’s not so common among traditiona­l private pensions. Benefits paid by most employer plans gradually lose some purchasing power.

Social Security increases retiree checks to compensate for inflation, but then adds that amount to a person’s underlying benefit so it grows with compoundin­g as future COLAs are factored in.

Q: Can Social Security afford future COLAs?

A; Proposals have been floated both to increase or trim back COLAs as part of a Social Security overhaul. Many advocates for older people argue the current inflation index doesn’t adequately reflect higher health care costs faced by the aging.

On the other side, groups pressing to reduce federal deficits urge switching to an alternate inflation measure that factors in consumers’ habit of substituti­ng cheaper goods when prices rise. That would yield slightly lower estimates of cost-of-living changes.

Social Security trustees said this year that the program’s long-term fiscal imbalance is casting a longer shadow. For the first time in 39 years, the cost of delivering benefits will exceed Social Security’s total income from payroll tax collection­s and interest. Now, Social Security will have to tap savings to pay full benefits.

 ?? JEFF CHIU/2020 ?? People stand near water to watch as the sun sets from the Presidio in San Francisco.
JEFF CHIU/2020 People stand near water to watch as the sun sets from the Presidio in San Francisco.

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