By Todd
Kockelman
Todd Kockelman is a registered
representative of Packerland Brokerage Services, Inc., and may be reached at
651-204-0655 or Todd@K-FFinancial.com.
Here are
six things you need to know about Social Security for 2014. For clarity’s sake,
here is a rundown of what is changing next year and what isn’t.
Social
Security recipients are getting a raise — but not much of one. In 2014 the
average monthly Social Security payment will increase by $19 due to a 1.5
percent cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), one of the smallest annual COLAs in
the program’s history. Since 1975, only seven COLAs have been less than 2
percent. Four of those seven have occurred in the past five years, however. The
2013 COLA was 1.7 percent.1,2
How does
Social Security measure COLAs? It refers to the federal government’s Consumer
Price Index, specifically the CPI-W, which tracks how inflation affects urban
wage earners and clerical workers. Social Security looks at the CPI-W from July
to September of the present year to figure the Social Security COLA for next
year, so the 2014 COLA reflects the very tame inflation measured in summer
2013.1,2,3
Does the
CPI-W accurately measure the inflation pressures that seniors face? Some senior
advocacy groups say it doesn’t. The Senior Citizens League, a nonprofit that
lobbies for elders and retired veterans, contends that Social Security
recipients have lost 34 percent of their purchasing power since 2000 because
the CPI-W doesn’t track rising health care expenses correctly.3
On its
website, the Bureau of Labor Statistics admits that the CPI “differs in
important ways from a complete cost-of-living measure.” The CPI measures
increases or decreases in rents, transportation costs, tuition, food, clothing,
prescription drug and medical care costs, and the prices of consumer
discretionary goods and services — 200 item categories in all. Still, some
prices in the CPI rise faster than others; medical costs increased 2.4 percent
from September 2012 to September 2013, and housing costs rose 2.3 percent.2,3,4
Chained CPI
is not yet being used to determine COLAs. Some analysts and legislators would
like Social Security COLAs to be based on chained CPI, a formula that assumes
some consumers are buying cheaper/alternative products and services as prices
rise. Supporters think that pegging Social Security COLAs to chained CPI could
reduce the program’s daunting shortfall by as much as 20 percent in the long
term.5,6
The CPI-W
is still the CPI of record, so to speak. That’s good for retirees, because the
Congressional Budget Office says that COLAs would be about 0.3 percent smaller
if they were based on chained CPI. Perhaps this sounds bearable for one year,
but according to AARP, a 62-year-old who retired and claimed Social Security in
2013 would be losing the equivalent of an entire month of income per year by
age 92 if chained CPI were used to figure benefit increases.5,6
Groups like
the Senior Citizens League and AARP wouldn’t mind basing the COLAs on the
CPI-E, an alternative CPI maintained to track prices most affecting consumers
aged 62 and up. From 1982-2011, the CPI-E showed yearly inflation averaging 3.1
percent compared to 2.9 percent for the CPI-W.4,5,6
Social
Security’s maximum monthly benefit is increasing. In 2013, a Social Security
recipient who had reached full retirement age could claim a maximum monthly
benefit of $2,533. In 2014, the limit is $2,642.1
Social
Security’s annual earnings limit is also increasing. This limit is only faced
by Social Security recipients who have yet to reach the month in which they
turn 66. In 2013, retirees younger than 66 were able to earn up to $15,120
before having $1 in retirement benefits temporarily withheld for every $2 above
that level. In 2014, the annual earnings limit rises to $15,480.
Social
Security recipients who will turn 66 in 2014 can earn up to $41,400 in 2014; if
their earnings break through that ceiling, they will have $1 of their benefits
temporarily withheld for every $3 above that level. Once you get to the month
in which you celebrate your 66th birthday, you can earn any amount of income
thereafter without a withholding penalty.1
On the job,
the wage base for Social Security taxes is rising. American workers will pay a
6.2 percent payroll tax on the initial $114,000 of their incomes in 2014. The
2013 payroll tax cap was set at $113,700. About 6 percent of working Americans
will pay more in Social Security tax in 2014 as a consequence of this seemingly
insignificant adjustment.1,6 (http://stillwatergazette.com)
Citations:
1money.usnews.com/money/blogs/planning-to-retire/2013/10/30/how-social-security-will-change-in-2014
[10/30/13]
2blogs.marketwatch.com/encore/2013/10/30/social-securitys-2014-raise-a-modest-1-5/
[10/30/13]
3seniorsleague.org/agenda/
[11/7/13]
4stats.bls.gov/cpi/cpifaq.htm#Question_4
[10/24/13]
5baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/bs-md-federal-chained-cpi-20131106,0,7051573,full.story
[11/7/13]
6aarp.org/politics-society/advocacy/info-02-2013/the-chained-consumer-price-index-explained.html
[2/13]
No comments:
Post a Comment