Everyone just LOVES to screw the old and the poor I guess it's just impossible to leave programs that are working alone. I hope every one of these supposed "Very Serious People" suffer massive financial reverses, and are dependent on both Social Security and Medicare. What a bunch of miserable, hateful, people.
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http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/beat-the-press/nyt-nails-it-on-social-security-and-the-chained-cpi
"Chained CPI" is the new magic phrase going around Washington these
days. This is how the government can cut Social Security and pretend it
is not really cutting Social Security.
If anyone has not yet heard the story, the plan is to change the
indexation formula for the annual cost of living adjustment by using the
chained CPI to measure inflation. It's not worth going into the details
(the people proposing it don't care, why should you?), but the point is
that the chained CPI would reduce the annual adjustment by 0.3
percentage points.
This may sound trivial but it adds up over time. After ten years a
retiree's benefits would be 3 percent lower, after twenty years 6
percent lower and someone surviving to collect benefits for thirty years
would see a 9 percent cut. If we assume the average retiree collects
benefits for 20 years, this amounts to a 3 percent cut in total
benefits. If that sounds small, ask the "job creators" about the impact
of a 3 percentage point increase in their tax rate.
Anyhow, a NYT editorial
on the topic makes all the right points, including an obvious one, if
the concern is making the indexation formula more accurate we can have
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) construct a full cost of living
index for the elderly. An experimental index that BLS already produces
shows that the current cost of living adjustment is actually less than
the rate of inflation seen by the elderly. There is a long way from this
experimental index to a full elderly CPI, but given that we will index
$10 trillion in Social Security benefits over the next decade, it might
be worth going this route.
Ten Economic Questions for 2025
-
Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2024.
Below are my ten questions for 2025 (I've been doing this online every year
for 20 years!). These...
7 hours ago
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