Daily Press (Sunday)

Where the candidates stand on retirement issues

- By Sandra Block Kiplinger's Personal Finance

Given that seniors are a large voting constituen­cy, both President Donald

Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden have resolved to protect Medicare and Social Security.

Biden proposes shoring up Social Security by increasing payroll taxes on highincome taxpayers. He would keep the current cap on payroll taxes, which is indexed to wage growth (in 2020, workers pay payroll taxes on earnings up to $137,700), but he also would apply the 12.4% tax — shared by workers and employers — on wages exceeding $400,000.

Biden wants to expand benefits, which could put more pressure on the program's finances. He wants to increase survivor benefits for low-income beneficiar­ies and gradually increase benefits for seniors starting at age 78. Seniors who are 82 would receive a 5% increase over their basic retirement payout.

Biden also has proposed changing the way the annual cost-of-living adjustment is calculated. He wants to use an index that places greater weight on items that account for a larger percentage of seniors' budgets, such as housing and health care.

Trump hasn't issued specific proposals to shore up Social Security, and critics say his proposed payroll tax cut to bolster the economy would further hurt the program. In the past, he has opposed proposals from fiscally conservati­ve Republican­s to curb spending on the programs. But as the budget deficit has grown to more than $1.8 trillion, he has indicated that changes to Social Security and Medicare could be on the table during a second term.

On Medicare, Biden supports lowering the age of eligibilit­y from 65 to 60. He also has called for repealing legislatio­n that bars Medicare from negotiatin­g drug prices with pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers, which he says would lower drug prices. In addition, pharmaceut­icals would be required to limit price increases for most prescripti­on drugs to the rate of inflation in order to be eligible for coverage by Medicare. Biden also wants to allow U.S. citizens to purchase prescripti­on drugs from other countries — where they're often cheaper — as long as the Department of Health and Human Services has determined they're safe.

If reelected, Trump is likely to continue to promote Medicare Advantage plans from private companies. The plans often offer lower premiums than traditiona­l Medicare and cover dental, vision and other services. However, they usually have a more limited network of providers than traditiona­l Medicare, which can be a problem when beneficiar­ies develop serious illnesses, critics say.

In an executive order issued last October, Trump directed the Department of Health and Human Services to take steps to ensure that traditiona­l Medicare isn't “advantaged or promoted” over Medicare Advantage.

Trump has supported proposed legislatio­n that would limit increases in Medicare prescripti­on drug benefits to the rate of inflation and limit seniors' out-of-pocket drug costs to $3,100 a year. He also wants to allow U.S. citizens to buy prescripti­on drugs from outside the country. In December, his administra­tion issued a proposed rule that would allow states and other entities to import prescripti­on drugs from Canada, provided certain conditions are met.

Trump's 2021 budget proposes about $500 billion in net spending cuts. Most of those would come from reducing payments to health care providers, not to beneficiar­ies.

Sandra Block is a senior editor at Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine. For more on this and similar money topics, visit Kiplinger.com.

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