Martin D. Goodkin

Profile

Username:
greatmartin
Name:
Martin D. Goodkin
Location:
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Birthday:
02/29
Status:
Single
Job / Career:
Other

Stats

Post Reads:
725,835
Posts:
6133
Photos:
2
Last Online:
> 30 days ago
View All »

My Friends

17 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago
> 30 days ago

Subscribe

Gay, Poor Old Man

Money & Finance > There Will Be Blood! Don't Fool with Old Folks !
 

There Will Be Blood! Don't Fool with Old Folks !

I respect Ekyprogressive (James) especially when it comes to opionions on medicine and politics. I asked him about the 'rumor' regarding NO RAISES for people on social security and this was what he responded with--if true the current tea parties will be just that--tea parties--as compared to what will happen if the seniors don't get a raise two years in a row!!!


Never an easy question..LOL
I wish I had better news for you than this, but I don't. It seems that there
won't be according to currect CBO projections. Normally there is a Cost of Living increase yearly, but this is what the CBO had
to say...

https://cboblog.cbo.gov/?p=235

Why CBO Projects No Social Security COLA for 2010 to 2012 Under Current
Law



The Social Security Administration (SSA) generally adjusts benefits payable
each January based on the annual change in the consumer price index for urban
wage earners (CPI-W) through the third quarter of the previous calendar year. 
(More information about the CPI is available from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics     <https://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpifaq.htm>.)  The index is based on
a starting point of 100 for the 1982-1984 period.  In January 2009, Social
Security beneficiaries received a benefit increase (often referred to as a
cost-of-living adjustment or COLA) of 5.8 percent. That COLA reflected the
increase in the CPI-W from 203.4 in the third quarter of 2007 to 215.2 in the
third quarter of 2008 (215.2 divided by 203.4 equals 1.058, or a 5.8 percent
change for that year-over-year comparison).

From the third quarter of 2008 to the first quarter of 2009, the CPI-W has
fallen (by about 4 percent) to 206.5 largely reflecting the decline in energy
prices from their historically high levels in 2008. Even though CBO anticipates
that the CPI-W will rise a bit over the next several months, we project that it
will be 209.5 for the third quarter of 2009, lower than the 215.2 CPI-W for the
third quarter of 2008. By law, Social Security benefits are unchanged in years
in which the change in CPI-W since the previous adjustment to benefits is zero
or less than zero. Thus, CBO anticipates no COLA in January 2010.

Moreover, CBO projects that inflationary pressures will be very low over the
next few years—in particular, our March 2009 economic forecast says that the
CPI-W will not reach the level it attained in the third quarter of 2008 until
late in 2011. (Under current laws and policies, CBO anticipates
third-quarter-over-third-quarter increases in the CPI-W of 1.1 percent each year
from 2010 to 2012.) As noted, a Social Security COLA will not be triggered until
the CPI-W for the third quarter of a year exceeds its level in the third quarter
of 2008. We project that the CPI-W will reach 217.0 in the third quarter of
2012, triggering a 0.8 percent COLA payable in January 2013. Thus, even though
CBO is projecting price increases in fiscal years 2010 and 2011, those annual
price increases would not be large enough to offset the price declines that have
already taken place in recent months. Beneficiaries in other federal programs,
including civil service and military retirement, and those drawing veterans’
compensation and pensions, also will not receive COLAs in 2010, 2011, or 2012,
by CBO’s projections, because their COLAs are tied to Social Security’s under
current law.

The absence of COLAs will affect payments of Social Security taxes and the
base for calculating benefits for new beneficiaries because it will affect the
maximum amount of wages that are subject to Social Security, known as the
taxable maximum. The Social Security Act specifies that the taxable maximum
increases only in years in which a COLA occurs. Thus, under CBO’s forecast, that
maximum will be frozen until 2013. At that time, the contribution and benefit
base will increases by the change in the national wage index since the last time
a COLA was triggered. Following those current-law rules, CBO anticipates the
base will hold steady at $106,800 for 2009 through 2012, and then jump to
$118,200 in 2013, reflecting the cumulative change in the national wage index
during the period of no COLAs....(more)


 

posted on July 23, 2009 5:27 PM ()

Comment on this article   


6,133 articles found   [ Previous Article ]  [ Next Article ]  [ First ]  [ Last ]