The estimate is based on the June reading for an inflation measure the Social Security Administration uses to calculate the annual cost of living adjustment, or COLA. It rose by 9.8% over the past 12 months, compared with the 9.1% annual jump for the broader and better known Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers.
Just how much more retirees, Americans with disabilities and other recipients will actually receive won’t be determined until the fall. The official adjustment, which the agency releases in October, is based on average inflation during the third quarter as measured by the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, known as CPI-W.
If inflation increases in the coming three months, the 2023 adjustment could be 11.4%, the league said. If price hikes moderate, the benefit bump could be 9.8%.
In May, the league estimated the adjustment would increase 8.6%, based on inflation at that point.
Whatever it is, the adjustment will likely be the largest since the early 1980s, the last time seniors received a double-digit boost.
Bills outpacing benefits
“Inflation has been so high and so much higher than the 5.9% COLA that people got, they have experienced a shortfall in their benefits,” Johnson said. “If people do not have adequate retirement savings or cash savings that they can easily get to, people are putting more on consumer credit cards.”
Half of seniors said they had to spend emergency savings over the past year, according to a survey the league conducted between January and March. That compares with 36% in a survey done last year.
Social Security benefits have lost 40% of their buying power since 2000 because of high inflation, according to a separate study from the league. The entitlement’s purchasing power dropped 10 percentage points between March 2021 and this past March, the largest since the study began in 2010. The loss is even greater now since inflation has continued to rise this year, Johnson said.
Lower Medicare premiums possible
It expects the 2023 premium to be lower than this year’s premium, though the final determination will be made in the fall.
Other repercussions
While many older Americans could use the extra money, a large adjustment could actually hurt low-income seniors. That’s because it could push them above the income limits to qualify for government aid, such as food stamps, or require them to start paying taxes on the benefits.
Some 39% of seniors who receive assistance said their benefits were reduced because of the hefty adjustment for 2022, while 15% said they lost access to at least one program, according to a survey by the league.
Also, some experts are concerned that a large adjustment could drain Social Security’s trust fund more quickly.
In their annual report, the program’s trustees assumed inflation would be 4.5% in 2022 and 2.3% in 2023 — though the actual figures will likely be well above that, Charles Blahous, senior research strategist at George Mason University’s Mercatus Center and former public trustee for Social Security and Medicare, said at a recent Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget forum.
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