Column: Big Social Security
COLA will be offset by Medicare premiums
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[June 23, 2017]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Retirees can look
forward to the largest Social Security cost-of-living adjustment next
year since 2012 - but don’t break out the champagne just yet. For many,
higher Medicare premiums will take a big bite out of their raise.
The 2018 Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) will not be
announced until October, but inflation trends point toward an increase
of about 2 percent, according to a recent forecast by the Senior
Citizens League. That would be a welcome change compared with the 0.3
percent bump in 2017, and 2016 when no COLA was made.
COLAS are determined by an automatic formula tied to the Consumer Price
Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). From 2013 to
2015, the annual increases have ranged around 1.5 percent.
For a retiree receiving the average monthly Social Security benefit of
$1,360, a 2 percent raise would translate to an increase of $27.20. But
for most beneficiaries, Medicare Part B premiums are deducted from
Social Security. And the impact of the Part B premium on net benefits
next year will vary due to what is known as the “hold harmless”
provision governing Social Security.
By law, the dollar amount of Part B premium increases cannot exceed the
dollar amount of the COLA - a feature that ensures net Social Security
benefits do not fall. The hold harmless provision applies to the 70
percent of the Medicare population enrolled in both programs. Those not
held harmless include anyone delaying their filing for Social Security
benefits, but others affected include some federal and state government
retirees. Affluent seniors who pay high-income Medicare premium
surcharges also are not protected.
The stingy COLAs of the past two years are rare, and now they have set
the table for an equally unusual situation for 2018.
The recent flat COLAs meant that nonprotected Medicare enrollees
shouldered most of the burden of rising Part B premiums; the premiums
for this group jumped sharply in 2016 and 2017. This year, they are
paying $134 per month, while protected beneficiaries are paying an
average of $109.
But a generous 2018 COLA will spread higher Part B program costs across
the entire Medicare population. That means nonprotected enrollees will
see their premiums fall, while the protected group will pay more.
Consider an example where the standard Part B premium falls to $125.
That above-mentioned average Social Security beneficiary, (receiving
$1,360 monthly) now faces a $16 increase in her monthly Part B premium,
reducing her COLA from $27.20 to $11.20. If she were receiving $2,000 a
month she would receive a net monthly COLA of $24, instead of $40.
How would low-income beneficiaries be affected? Someone receiving $600
would see her $12 gross COLA cut to just $6 - although she might also be
eligible for a Medicare Savings Program depending on where she lives. In
some states, these programs turn to Medicaid to pay Part B premiums,
which means she would receive her full COLA (http://reut.rs/1OXKZ9b).
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A senior citizen lawn bowls in Sun City, Arizona, January 9, 2013.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
COLA FALLS BEHIND
Setting aside the hold-harmless math, the COLA formula is not keeping seniors
even with rising inflation. The Senior Citizens League’s annual study of changes
in key costs impacting seniors found that Social Security beneficiaries have
lost nearly one-third of their buying power since 2000, and they have lost 7
percent just over the past 12 months.
Healthcare premiums and out-of-pocket costs loom large, accounting for five of
the top 10 items in the study. “Retirees are either spending down their savings
to cover the gaps, or simply going without,” said Mary Johnson, the group’s
Social Security and Medicare policy consultant.
Rising healthcare costs threaten to erode net Social Security benefits
dramatically over time, according to Healthview Services, a maker of healthcare
cost projection software. A Healthview report issued last week projects that
healthcare inflation will rise an average of 5.47 percent annually for the
foreseeable future. That is almost triple the recent historical U.S. inflation
rate and more than double the annual projected Social Security COLAs.
A couple turning 65 this year receiving average Social Security benefits will
pay 59 percent of lifetime Social Security benefits for healthcare; the same
couple aged 55 this year can expect to pay out 92 percent when they reach
Medicare age.
The healthcare cost trend underscores the value of working longer. Staying on
the job reduces the number of years of Medicare premium payments, and creates
opportunities to boost Social Security income - and COLAs - through delayed
claiming. A growing number of planning experts also suggest that retirees keep
part of their portfolio in stocks well past retirement age to help beat
inflation.
For workers in high-deductible health plans, health savings accounts (HSAs)
offer the opportunity to save tax-free; the dollars can be invested and later
spent tax-free to meet health expenses. But for most people, HSA contributions
wind up being used to meet current health expenses.
But in general, healthcare cost inflation simply underscores the need to boost
saving, notes Ron Mastrogiovanni, Healthview’s CEO. “Big numbers scare people,
but you can do something about this.”
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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