U.S. retirees to get welcome bump in Social Security
benefits
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[October 12, 2018]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Come January, most U.S.
retirees will get some welcome news when they check their bank accounts
- the biggest inflation adjustment to Social Security benefits in eight
years.
The federal government on Thursday announced a 2.8 percent Social
Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for 2019; seniors will see the
raise in their January benefit payment. That is the largest increase
since 2012, when the COLA was 3.6 percent.
Just as encouraging, health insurance will take a smaller bite out of
benefits next year. The standard Medicare Part B premium is forecast to
rise just $1.50 to $135.50, according to the program’s trustees. Since
the premium typically is deducted from Social Security payments, that
means most beneficiaries will get to keep most of the COLA. (The
official Part B premium will not be announced until later this year.)
COLAs are determined by an automatic formula tied to the Consumer Price
Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). With
inflation running very flat since the recession of 2009-2010, COLAs have
been anemic in some recent years - there was no COLA at all in 2015, and
it was three-tenths of 1 percent in 2016. The COLA awarded for 2018 was
a more generous 2 percent.
But for many retirees, that increase was blunted by the impact of the
little-understood hold-harmless rule, which prohibits the dollar amount
of Part B premium increases from exceeding the dollar amount of the COLA
for roughly 70 percent of beneficiaries. The rule ensures that net
Social Security benefits do not fall when the dollar amount of the Part
B increase is greater than the dollar amount of the COLA increase. Last
year, however, due to some quirky dynamics of how the COLA and Part B
premium interact, the COLA was wiped out for many seniors. [nL1N1NQ0ZA]
(https://reut.rs/2iuZM3J).
This year should be different for most beneficiaries. For example,
assuming the standard Part B premium winds up at $135.50 in 2019, the
2.8 percent COLA will translate to a $40.50 monthly net raise (after the
Medicare premium adjustment) for a beneficiary receiving $1,500 this
year.
The math will be less straightforward for beneficiaries who currently
pay less than the standard Part B premium - again due to the
hold-harmless rule, which kept their premiums down in recent years. That
group includes roughly 25 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries,
according to research by the Senior Citizens League - in most cases,
lower-income seniors. Most of these retirees will see their premium jump
up to the standard 2019 level, consuming a larger portion of the COLA.
“That’s where we will see the biggest bite taken out of the COLA next
year,” said Mary Johnson, a Social Security policy analyst for the
League.
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U.S. Social Security card designs over the past several decades are
shown in this photo illustration taken in Toronto, Canada on January
7, 2017. REUTERS/Hyungwon Kang
THE LONG VIEW ON HEALTH INFLATION
Despite the overall good COLA news, rising healthcare costs continue to
pose a long-term threat to net Social Security benefits. For example,
the Medicare trustees project that the Part B premium will start rising
at a faster pace beginning in 2020, rising anywhere from 5.6 to 10
percent annually through 2026.
Overall healthcare inflation is projected to rise 4.22 percent over the
coming 20 years, according to a report released last week by research
firm HealthView Services. That is down from HealthView’s 2017 projection
of 5.47 percent, due mainly to moderation of projected prescription drug
costs. HealthView cited ongoing shifts by consumers from brand names to
less expensive generics, and the earlier-than-expected closing of the
doughnut-hole gap in plan coverage.
Still, HealthView calculates that healthcare expenses will consume about
half (48 percent) of lifetime Social Security benefits for a healthy
66-year-old couple retiring this year. And the squeeze will get worse in
the years ahead due to healthcare cost inflation. HealthView calculates
that a 55-year-old healthy couple will need 57 percent of their benefits
to cover future retirement healthcare costs, and a 45-year-old couple
will spend 63 percent.
“That’s very worrisome, since so many seniors rely on Social Security
for most of their income,” said Ron Mastrogiovanni, HealthView’s chief
executive officer.
One way that seniors can control cost is to take advantage of the annual
fall Medicare enrollment season, which begins on Oct. 15 and runs
through Dec. 7. [nL2N1WJ111] (https://reut.rs/2yj24dB) This is the time
of year when you can make changes to your basic coverage and
prescription drug insurance. Prescription drug premiums, in particular,
are volatile and can jump dramatically from year to year.
“People really need to do an annual checkup on their Part D coverage,”
said Johnson. “Unfortunately, most seniors don’t do it.”
In some cases, seniors can mitigate those costs through improved health
management of chronic conditions, the report finds. Mastrogiovanni also
recommends making modest increases in contributions to retirement saving
accounts to offset costs. “The simple idea of improving the management
of health conditions and investing the savings underscores a key point –
taking retirement healthcare off the table as a concern is an achievable
goal.”
(Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago; Editing by Matthew
Lewis)
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