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Social Security benefits will increase 8.7% next year.


               
2022 Oct 13, 6:22am   3,443 views  20 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   follow (6)  

The biggest increase in Social Security benefits in four decades will deliver much-needed breathing room for millions of Social Security recipients.

The Social Security Administration, the federal government agency that oversees the benefits, announced a 8.7% increase in the Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for 2023.

The increase is the largest since 1981, when the COLA was 11.2%, and raises the average retiree benefit by more than $140 per month starting in January, according to the Social Security Administration.

The adjustment — coupled with a decrease in Medicare Part B premiums next year — will make a critical difference in making ends meet for the more than 70 million retired senior citizens and disabled workers who have grappled this year with mounting prices for everything from electric and natural gas bills to groceries and monthly rent.

“Today's COLA announcement is excellent — and important — news for retirees,” Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, told Yahoo Money. “The annual COLA is a key feature of Social Security, one that private-sector pension plans lack. It keeps benefits from eroding over time … [but] it is essential to recognize that the COLA is not a benefit increase. It simply allows beneficiaries to tread water in the face of rising prices.”

Folks who receive Social Security benefits are typically notified by mail in early December about their new benefit amount. Most beneficiaries can also view their COLA notice online through their personal my Social Security account at www.socialsecurity.gov/myaccount.

The jaw-dropping bump-up was stoked by the soaring cost of groceries, gas and other goods and services since July. The Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers‌ (CPI-W) increased tk% year over year in September, down from tk% in August.

The COLA is calculated by averaging together the CPI-W consumer price index for the third quarter of the year – July, August, and September of 2022 – and then comparing that figure with the same data last year.

The once a year inflation adjustment began in 1975 under a formula made into law by Congress. And it goes a long way in helping beneficiaries stay abreast of increasing day-to-day living costs.

“We hear a lot about how retirees live on a fixed income,” Anqi Chen, a senior research economist and the assistant director of savings research at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, told Yahoo Money.

“Social Security is definitely not fixed income because it is indexed to inflation," Chen added. "The COLA prevents retirement income from being eroded away by inflation. That is a wonderful feature of Social Security because many retirees rely on Social Security for a large chunk of their retirement income. For the typical retiree, it covers about half of their retirement income. To have half of your income indexed to inflation is a big help, especially when prices are increasing.”

This year, 27% of retirees reported they’re spending much higher or a little higher than they can afford, versus 17% in 2020, according to the findings in the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI)’s 2022 Spending in Retirement Survey. Seven in 10 say Social Security is a major source of their income.

"The combination of a COLA this high, and the fact that Medicare Part B premiums went down is a once-in-a-lifetime event,” Mary Johnson, a Social Security policy analyst for The Senior Citizens League, told Yahoo Money. “This is probably as good as it will get.”

In the meantime, it's too early to say how well the 8.7% COLA will keep pace with inflation in 2023. The 5.9% COLA received this year has fallen short by 50%, according to Johnson.

“Now let's watch to see if inflation comes down gracefully, instead of popping and deflating,” Johnson said. “That soft landing might mean that inflation slows in 2023 and people wind up with a small COLA of about 2% in 2024. The pop and deflate would mean no COLA in 2024 due to deflation and that brings a whole set of different issues. Pop and deflate occurred in 2010 and 2011 after the Great Recession.”

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/social-security-benefits-cola-124207216.html?.tsrfin-notif

Comments 1 - 20 of 20        Search these comments

1   RC2006   2022 Oct 13, 7:11am  

How much will this effect the negative feedback loop increasing inflation?
2   zzyzzx   2022 Oct 13, 7:18am  

https://finance.yahoo.com/m/99c83991-987d-3335-bcc0-0acbd9a5062e/a-shocking-number-of-baby.html

A shocking number of baby boomers and Generation X plan to work past 70—or forever
3   Robert Sproul   2022 Oct 13, 7:49am  

"INFLATION!! Let's throw some money at it!!"
4   Ceffer   2022 Oct 13, 9:33am  

Not to worry. Increase SS all they want for optics. The vaxes will eradicate this fiscal problem of proliferating, bloodsucking BoomFucks. But, they can still vote!

Just start worrying when you reach 60, the new 'Logan's Run' threshold, unless you are an adrenochrome sipping elite.
5   WookieMan   2022 Oct 13, 10:02am  

zzyzzx says

A shocking number of baby boomers and Generation X plan to work past 70—or forever

Morons... Sorry if you hit these generations. I took 3 years off. Did nothing beside take care of the kids and travel. No obligations. I was lucky I suppose. I still don't have to work, but the kids are older. I can't sit on my ass so I got back to working doing shit that doesn't involve other people.

Mind you I enjoy socializing. But FUCK work relationships. They suck. I have one boss now and don't have to deal with the public. I'm fucking winning.
6   clambo   2022 Oct 13, 11:44am  

This is insane.
I'm receiving social security and I don't agree with these absurd cost of living adjustments.
In a real world pension, it's not "adjustable" upward; you get what you paid for in your contract.
The same goes for an IRA; if I'm not careful I might run out of money and still be alive.
SS takes $248/month out as my "medicare premium", maybe that's going up too?
Last year I sent the US Treasury a check for roughly what SS paid me so I don't feel too guilty.
It's obviously inflationary! WTF are they thinking!?!
7   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Oct 13, 11:56am  

Yeah, and in 2034 the payments will decrease by 25% as the spare fund runs out and so will start paying out only what it gets in. Ooops... make that 2032, since the funds are now draining faster than previously expected.
8   Ceffer   2022 Oct 13, 12:29pm  

Guess it's time to start a little rainy day fund for a deluxe package euthanasia with euphoric drugs and a big titted blond choking out the last breath sitting on your face.
9   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Oct 13, 12:58pm  

How is the COLA calculated?

The SSA calculates the annual cost-of-living adjustment based on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). Put together by the BLS, the CPI-W is a measure of how the cost of goods and services changes over time.

By comparing the CPI-W in the third quarters (July, August and September) of the current and previous year, the SSA determines how much benefits need to increase by in the coming 12 months to avoid falling behind the rate of inflation.

The COLA is the percentage by which the two CPI-W figures differ.

In 2022, the CPI-W for Q3 was 291.901, while in the same period in 2021 it was 268.421: a difference of 8.7%.
10   Ceffer   2022 Oct 13, 1:01pm  

I think they wiped out the OldFucks with vaccines and fake Covid death protocols to the tune of 20 percent, so they can allow a bit of noblesse oblige at 8.7 percent bump. Like cisT says, likely trying to four wheel out of the election mire.

There is never a hand that gives from Guv, without an even bigger hand taking back beneath the radar.
11   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Oct 13, 1:04pm  

Several important parameters affect Social Security's Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program and the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program. We determine these parameters each October by following formulas set by law. Two important parameters are the national average wage index and the cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). COLAs and wage-indexed amounts for recent years are summarized in a table. The table's column headings provide links to more detailed data.

We use the national average wage index to "index" earnings for initial benefit computations and to determine several wage-indexed amounts that primarily affect the OASDI program.

COLAs provide annual increases in payments from OASDI and SSI programs.

Automatically increased amounts, as described above, are published in the Federal Register in late October.

https://www.ssa.gov/OACT/COLA/index.html
12   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Oct 13, 1:14pm  

cisTits says

And where is the money coming from to pay for this?

Out of any SS surplus plus current worker's paychecks on an ongoing basis, I believe. The surplus in 2020 was $2.9 trillion.
13   Ceffer   2022 Oct 13, 1:14pm  

I think they still have the pile of IOU's from when Reagan plundered the money from SS and left a pile of paper. When will current payroll SS assessments exceed current payouts?
14   Al_Sharpton_for_President   2022 Oct 13, 1:18pm  

Ceffer says

When will current payroll SS assessments exceed current payouts?

Probably never. The maximum "contribution amount" just keeps getting raised.

The limit changes year to year depending on the national average wage index.

For money earned in 2022, the taxable maximum, as it is also called, is $147,000.

This is an increase from the previous amount of $142,800 in 2021 and means that workers on high salaries will be paying tax on more of their income.

The tax rate for 2022 earnings sits at 6.2% each for employees and employers.

So individuals earning $147,000 or more in 2022 would contribute $9,114 to the OASDI program, and their employer would contribute the same amount, according to the Social Security Administration.

For those who are self-employed, the OASDI tax rate is 12.4%.
15   Ceffer   2022 Oct 13, 1:27pm  

Time to kill lots more people over 62. Rockefellers: "You rang?"

https://t.me/drue86/25785
16   clambo   2022 Oct 13, 2:02pm  

COLA was possibly made automatic when it was proposed and passed years ago.
17   Booger   2022 Oct 13, 3:44pm  

cisTits says

And where is the money coming from to pay for this?


18   Tenpoundbass   2022 Oct 13, 7:01pm  

I knew this 72 year old Puerto Rican woman that danced like that. She was a friend of the wife's family. She was the first to show up for a party and the last to leave.
She could eat, drink and dance like that the whole time.

They called her Tia Norma(Not really an Aunt, but a long time family friend)



19   clambo   2022 Oct 13, 7:17pm  

"Bloodsucking boomfucks" ?
I'm not sucking anyone's blood.
I would have preferred a real pension which I pay for instead of social security.
20   AD   2022 Oct 13, 8:23pm  

Al_Sharpton_for_President says


For money earned in 2022, the taxable maximum, as it is also called, is $147,000.


Yeah, I heard the Dems want to raise that limit to at least $300,000.

I think that is what the government is going to do. Its going to steadily increase the limit to try to keep Social Security in the accounting black, or keep it financially solvent.

This is a marginal change instead of being forced to enact a Social Security means test or increasing the rate from 6.2% to 7% or more.
.

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