Over the past couple of years, one of the most-clicked posts on NAPA-Net has been on a topic that is a bit of a head-scratcher.
I’m speaking, of course, of the (now-incessantly tracked), monthly projections of the (potential) cost of living adjustment (COLA) for Social Security. It started back when inflation emerged as a real consumer concern—and it was spurred by the efforts of a group called the Senior Citizens League in publishing—EVERY MONTH—a projected cost of living adjustment (COLA) for Social Security.[i] And our coverage of those projections has been, and continues to be, one of the most clicked-on stories[ii] (ditto other publications, apparently).Like many, perhaps most, of you, I was initially intrigued by the reporting. Let’s face it, after a couple of decades of relative economic slumber, inflation has reared its ugly head in a way that reminds some of us of the days of our youth when inflation was an actual scary economic reality, rather than an obscure concept. And, at a time when the soaring cost of—well, everything—has (re)garnered our attentions, the notion that those impacts for older workers might be muted by a positive adjustment in their monthly benefit (not to mention those prospective increases in contribution and benefit limits of qualified plans) was encouraging.
But every single month?
Not that Social Security has always had a COLA. In fact, Congress enacted the COLA provision as part of the 1972 Social Security Amendments, and automatic annual COLAs didn’t begin until 1975. Prior to that, benefits were increased only when Congress enacted special legislation. As for its calculation, Social Security’s COLA is based on the percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) from the third quarter of the last year a COLA was determined to the third quarter of the current year. If there is no increase—and, believe it or not, that’s been the case in recent memory—there can be no COLA. That said, you can imagine that there tends to be something of a hue-and-cry from Social Security beneficiaries in those rare situations (most recently in 2016,[iii] though the increase in 2017 was just 0.3%).
Of course, inflation measures often seem to be as much art as science—varying largely on what you spend your money on—and seniors do tend to spend money differently. In fact, one of the criticisms of the current formula is that it considers the purchases that current workers make, rather than retirees.[iv] Another factor is the timing of the formula, which considers the period from September of one year to the next—while the government reports tend to reference the change from the PRIOR month, or in some cases from the same month a year earlier.
That said, those on what are commonly referred to as “fixed incomes”[v] are understandably interested (and anxious) about potential increases (or lack thereof) in those finances. Let’s face it—retirement is not a profession that warrants merit increases, after all, nor are there typically opportunities for “promotion.” Purely from an SEO perspective, one can understand and appreciate the internet search engines cranking up to try and get a peek at what’s coming up in terms of potential benefit increases (and, to be sure, we do get significant traffic for those posts outside of our newsletter distribution). Still, and while those projections are based on the realities of the official inflation numbers reported by the federal government, they are merely point-in-time guestimates when it comes to knowing what the actual COLA number will be.
Not that I don’t “get” and appreciate the significance of the ACTUAL Social Security COLA—its impact on retirement projections, not to mention realities, is significant. That said, relentlessly tracking the POTENTIAL COLA based on interim monthly readings of inflation a year out from the actual establishment of the COLA have always struck me as a bit… obsessive. But clicks drive coverage these days and for the foreseeable future, and therefore, as long as you (all) keep clicking, we’ll keep covering…
Still, it should serve as a reminder to us all that planning for retirement should look beyond the income we happen to be drawing when we leave the workforce. After all, if the income we have at retirement isn’t enough to adjust to the costs of living in retirement—it might well cost us an “adjustment” in how, or how well, we live through retirement.
- Nevin E. Adams, JD
[i] According to their website, they are a nonpartisan seniors group, and have been since 1992, though it wasn’t until the COLA adjustment reports that they crept onto my radar. And perhaps that, as much as anything else, explains the monthly COLA reports.
[ii] And by including “Social Security” in the title of this post, I’m shamelessly trolling for some additional SEO visibility, of course.
[iii] You can find a table of the COLA at https://www.ssa.gov/cola/
[iv] For more details, check out http://assets.aarp.org/rgcenter/ppi/econ-sec/fs160.pdf or https://www.aarp.org/retirement/social-security/info-2020/colas-history.html.
[v] And it’s not just retirees. Disabled workers and their dependents account for 19% of total benefits paid, according to the Social Security Administration (see http://www.socialsecurity.gov/pressoffice/basicfact.htm).
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