San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

HOW DO YOU FIGHT BACK AGAINST RETIREMENT’S NEMESIS: INFLATION?

- BY JOHN F. WASIK Wasik writes for The New York Times.

Even if you are a retirement supersaver, inflation is always lurking like a chronic, incurable disease, eroding retirement benefits that often fail to keep up with the rising cost of living.

To many families, inflation’s effect on their nest egg is a taboo subject — if they think about it at all — because it raises the ugly prospect of outliving their savings. This year, it’s something no American of any age can ignore. U.S. inflation is rising at its fastest pace in roughly three decades, with consumer prices climbing 6.2 percent in the 12 months through October.

As a certified financial planner and CEO of Blue Ocean Global Wealth in Gaithersbu­rg, Md., Marguerita Cheng has taken steps to protect the nest egg of her mother, Eileen, 75, against steady price increases. The groundwork was laid by her late father, Paul, who fled communist China as a teenager and built a prosperous career with IBM, accumulati­ng a pension, life insurance policies and diligent savings.

“Dad didn’t want us to anguish and scramble when he died,” Cheng said. “He even waited until he was 70 to collect the largest possible Social Security and survivor benefit.”

But today’s Social Security benefits — despite a recent cost-of-living adjustment of 5.9 percent, the highest in 40 years — are being hit hard by price increases. According to a study by Mary Johnson, an analyst with the nonpartisa­n Senior Citizens League, soaring inflation has “deeply eroded” the buying power of those benefits this year.

Analyzing national consumer price data through July, Johnson found a widening chasm between increases for 39 common expenses that affect people older than 65 — Medicare premiums and prescripti­on drugs being among the fastest-rising — and the cost-of-living adjustment for Social Security.

The government announced this month that premiums for Medicare Part B (which covers doctor visits) for 2022 would rise 14.5 percent, one of the biggest jumps in the program’s history. That will take the standard monthly premium to $170.10 from $148.50.

In a new survey by the Senior Citizens League, 44 percent of Medicare recipients reported spending between $160 and $495 a month on health care.

“That’s a significan­t portion of income,” considerin­g that the average monthly Social Security benefit is $1,487, Johnson said.

“These findings are particular­ly troubling because about 46 percent of our survey participan­ts also report that they have no retirement savings to fall back on,” she added.

“Over the past 21 years, COLAS have raised Social Security benefits by 55 percent, but housing costs rose nearly 118 percent and health care costs rose 145 percent over the same period,” Johnson said. “COLAS are intended to protect the buying power of Social Security benefits, but according to consumer price data through July of 2021, Social Security benefits have lost nearly one-third of their buying power — 32 percent — since 2000.”

How you can offset price increases

It is hard to outpace these escalating costs with convention­al retirement benefits. While Social Security payments are linked to the consumer price index, the cost-of-living adjustment is partly eaten up by increases in those Medicare premiums and other medical expenses. So it is difficult to keep up with the real cost of health care in retirement unless you plan ahead.

Maximize Social Security benefits through delayed retirement credits. That means waiting as long as possible — ideally, until age 70 — before you draw benefits. Your monthly payments will be higher and then augmented by annual cost-of-living percentage adjustment­s when you do start receiving checks.

“Optimizing Social Security benefits is so important for everyone,” said Cheng, the financial planner. “For married couples, this also means locking in the largest survivor benefit.” She explained why: “My parents are 14 years apart. My dad deferred his benefit until age 70. He earned delayed retirement credits, then he locked in the largest benefit for my mom. When he passed away, my mom’s survivor’s benefit was my dad’s benefit.”

Also crucial: keeping a sharp eye on your spending before and during retirement. Combine that vigilance with an aggressive savings plan. And the importance of paying down debt, and avoiding new borrowing, cannot be overstated.

“Get a handle on expenses before you enter retirement,” said Amy Braun-bostich, a certified financial planner with Braun-bostich Associates in Canonsburg, Pa.

Do some homework. Estimate your net expected retirement income using online calculator­s. How much monthly income will you have after taxes and ongoing bills for health care and daily living expenses?

It pays to estimate total post-retirement health care costs, which include dental, vision and Medicare supplement­al policies (known as Medigap) and Part D plans, which cover items such as prescripti­on drugs.

“Most don’t understand the impact of medical costs in retirement or understand how much purchasing power they will lose over 10 to 20 years,” Braun-bostich said. To address that issue, she suggests that people covered by employer-sponsored, high-deductible health plans contribute to vehicles such as health savings accounts.

Consider the costs of long-term care. Cheng bolstered her mother’s portfolio with vehicles that are designed to fend off inflation. In 2000, she recommende­d that her parents buy long-term care insurance, which can cover care in an assisted living or nursing facility or in one’s home. At the time, she recommende­d policies that would expand benefits at a 5 percent simple interest rate for her father and 5 percent for her mother. The policy has a $125 daily benefit with 5 percent compound inflation protection.

“She also has 100 percent home care,” Cheng said. “We did this because my grandmothe­r lived to 94.”

Save and invest. You know this, but it bears repeating. Another solid way to increase preretirem­ent saving is by investing in low-cost, diversifie­d nocommissi­on stock-index mutual funds. Use a cost analyzer to see how much you could save.

And remember: Life throws curveballs

No matter how you view inflation, you will need to buffer the cost of living and unforeseen preretirem­ent financial shocks such as job loss, divorce and out-ofpocket medical expenses, which certainly make retirement planning even more challengin­g. A study by the National Endowment for Financial Education showed that 96 percent of Americans experience­d four or more such “income shocks” by the time they reached age 70.

 ?? SHURAN HUANG THE NEW Y ORK TIMES ?? Marguerita Cheng, (right) a financial planner, helped her mother, Eileen, set up extra defenses for the retirement savings her father left behind.
SHURAN HUANG THE NEW Y ORK TIMES Marguerita Cheng, (right) a financial planner, helped her mother, Eileen, set up extra defenses for the retirement savings her father left behind.

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