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Study: Recession will cost Baby Boomers up
to $40,000 in Social Security Benefits
WASHINGTON, Dec.
15, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- Baby Boomers will see greatly reduced
Social Security benefits over the course of
their retirements due to an unprecedented
combination of low wage growth and no annual
cost-of-living adjustments (COLA), according
to a new study by The Senior Citizens
League. And those who first become eligible
for Social Security in 2011 will receive
lower benefits than retirees born a year
earlier.
This is the most comprehensive study ever
released to show the recession's impact on
Social Security benefits for the first wave
of baby boomers.
It found that the combination of rapidly
slowing wage growth and no COLA is shrinking
the normal increases in initial retirement
benefits.
An inequity will also be created: people
born in 1949 (who turn 62 next year) will
receive lower benefits than retirees with
similar work histories born just one year
earlier.
Moreover, the lack of a COLA will reduce
lifetime Social Security benefits by as much
as $40,000 for
many retirees with average earning histories
(reductions will be felt regardless of the
age at which people begin claiming benefits,
and some higher-earning seniors stand to
lose even more).
Recent wage and consumer price trends – two
of the key factors in determining Social
Security benefits – have combined to form a
"perfect storm" for the first wave of Baby
Boomers.
Since the start of the recession, average
wage growth has plummeted, and there will be
no COLA in 2011 for the second year in a
row.
Under normal economic conditions, the
initial benefits of each succeeding birth
year tend to be slightly higher than the
previous birth year as wages rise over time.
But average wage growth has been slowing
since the 1980s and has dropped markedly
since 2008.
Furthermore, low inflation (a situation that
government economists expect to continue)
led to no COLA in 2010 and 2011. The loss of
the compounding effect of a COLA on lifetime
benefits is high, and grows the longer a
senior spends in retirement. Seniors who
turn 62 during the years of no COLA are hit
with the full brunt of the compounding loss
and stand to lose the most.
Aggravating the situation is the fact that,
although general inflation is low, seniors'
living costs have increased, especially due
to rising Medicare premiums.
Lifetime Social Security Benefits an Average
Senior Will Lose Due to No/Low COLAs(1)
|
Year of Birth |
62-Year-Old Retiree |
66-Year-Old Retiree |
|
|
1946 |
-$30,163.60 |
-$39,152.50 |
|
|
1947 |
-$31,436.10 |
-$39,463.20 |
|
|
1948 |
-$20,871.00 |
-$26,130.60 |
|
|
1949 |
-$8,908.90 |
-$11,141.30 |
|
|
1950 |
-$2,229.20 |
-$2,880.90 |
|
|
1951 |
-$463.00 |
-$648.70 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) Low COLA is defined as less than 2.8
percent, which is the average COLA paid from
1975 through 2009. This chart shows how much
low or no COLA will affect benefits over a
20-year (for those retiring at age 66) or 25
year (for those retiring at age 62)
retirement.
"Large numbers of seniors will be at risk of
outliving their retirement income and being
pushed into poverty due to an unprecedented
combination of economic factors," said Larry
Hyland, chairman of The Senior
Citizens League.
"The Senior Citizens League is adamantly
opposed to deficit reduction proposals that
would cut COLAs. Instead, Congress needs to
pass an emergency COLA provision or
guarantee a minimum average COLA to prevent
this disturbing erosion in Social Security
benefits."
The Senior Citizens League also recommends
that any legislation that changes how Social
Security benefits are calculated is devised
in a way that is fair to all, to prevent
inequities between retirees close in age.
The full study is available upon request.
With 1.2 million supporters, The Senior
Citizens League is one of the nation's
largest nonpartisan seniors groups. Its mission
is to promote and assist members and
supporters, to educate and alert senior
citizens about their rights and freedoms as
U.S. Citizens, and to protect and defend the
benefits senior citizens have earned and
paid for. The Senior Citizens League is a
proud affiliate of The Retired Enlisted
Association. Visit www.SeniorsLeague.org for
more information.
SOURCE The Senior Citizens League