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Social Security Cuts would hurt Low Income
Older Adults
WASHINGTON, Dec.
2, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
--The National Senior Citizens Law Center is
concerned that proposals contained in the
National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility
and Reform report to cut Social Security
benefits would land a devastating blow to
those older adults who rely on the program
for all or most of their income.
Low-income
older adults and those who work on their
behalf should be extremely concerned about
the Commission's recommendations related to
the program.
Social Security is of vital importance to
older Americans, providing a majority of
income for two-thirds of them. Its
importance to people of color is even
larger. For example, the majority of single
older Hispanic, Asian American and African
American women rely on Social Security for
90% of their income.
Calling for a gradual increase in the Social
Security retirement age to age 69 and a
corresponding increase in the minimum age
for early retirement to age 64 is a cut in
benefits, no matter what age a
person retires.
For example, if the normal retirement age is
raised to 69, this means that benefits would
be approximately 25% less than they would be
if the retirement age had remained at age
65.
Since Social Security benefits are already
modest, this would have a particularly
negative effect on those who heavily rely on
it to pay their bills and the increasing
costs of health care as they age.
Similarly, changing the method for
calculating the annual cost of living
adjustment (COLA) by using the Chained
Consumer Price Index (C-CPI) instead of the
standard CPI that is currently used would
cut future benefits for those with limited
income and resources.
Since they have already reduced their
expenditures to basic necessities, it is far
harder for them to adjust to having less
income when prices continue to rise. Those
with other income from pensions or savings
may be able to substitute a less expensive
item and manage to deal with little or no
COLA.
This is just not the case with the elderly
poor.
The calculation of the COLA needs to be
changed, but
in the opposite direction so that it
reflects the greater impact of health care
inflation that Social Security beneficiaries
experience.
The conclusion that the standard CPI does
not accurately measure changes in the cost
of living for older people and people with
disabilities is correct, but not in the way
the commission's leaders would have you
believe.
In fact the standard CPI is deficient
because it is based on the expenditures of
the general population and not on the
expenditures of the older persons and people
with disabilities who have much higher
expenditures for health care, the one sector
of the economy that has consistently shown
the highest rate of inflation.
Future generations will suffer the greatest
impact of Social Security cuts. It is
especially ironic that some advocates for
cutting Social Security benefits say that
the deficit and government spending on
programs like Social Security increases the
debt "our children" must pay.
In fact, people approaching retirement age
today will not suffer from the proposed
increase in the retirement age. It is their
children who will.
An increase in the amount of wages subject
to the FICA tax so as to reach 90% of all
wages is a good idea, but it should be
phased in immediately, not over the next 40
years.Another helpful recommendation is
mandating participation by all new state and
local government hires.
Social Security is not the cause of nor is
it contributing to the nation's current
deficit problem. The Social Security Trust
Fund continues to generate a surplus and,
contrary to current political rhetoric,
Social Security will be able to pay full
benefits until 2037 without any change in
the law.
The program's financial solvency can be
sustained for the foreseeable future beyond
2037 with only a modest increase in FICA
revenue. This does not rise to the level of
a crisis.
The Social Security program is likely to
become more, not less, important for the
economic survival of older adults both now
and in the future.
Surveys continue to show retirement security
in old age is extremely important to a
majority of Americans.
Since savings and defined contribution plans
have lost significant ground in the economic
downturn and defined benefit pensions are
threatened with extinction, we should not
make such drastic cuts to a program that is
a lifeline for so many.