USA TODAY International Edition

Rise in COLAs could be best in six years

- Dan Caplinger

Most people who get retirement benefits from Social Security get the bulk of their income from their monthly benefits. Because they don’t have many other sources of money to pay for living expenses, the annual cost-of-living adjustment­s (COLAs) that Social Security gives participan­ts every January play a vital role in helping people make ends meet – especially as the expenses they have to pay inexorably rise.

Over the past decade, Social Security has been pretty stingy in the COLAs it gives to retirees. But 2019 could be different. Early indication­s suggest Social Security benefits could go up by a greater amount than retirees and other participan­ts have seen since 2012.

Social Security calculates each year’s COLA by looking at the Consumer Price Index from July through September and comparing it to the previous year’s levels. So far, only the July figure is available, but if that reading were to stay flat in August and September, it would give retirees a 2.7 percent increase come January. If price levels rise this month and the next, then it’s conceivabl­e the COLA could reach 3 percent.

The trade-off, of course, is the same rising levels of inflation that produce larger increases to Social Security benefits also end up forcing recipients to pay more for the essential goods that they need. But when the costs of the things that you need as an older American always seem to go up regardless of what government inflation figures say – especially in areas such as health care – then getting a boost to your Social Security is at least a bit of a consolatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States