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Ripping off Needy Seniors

7/13/2011 6:48 AM   By NCPSSM
At least the Los Angeles Times gets it...

Ripping off needy seniors through the 'chained CPI'

Basing Social Security cost-of-living increases on the chained consumer price index, which presumes people will trade down to cheaper goods as costs rise, would force elderly people on fixed incomes to forgo essentials.

Michael Hiltzik July 13, 2011 Of all the ways policymakers in Washington show they have absolutely no conception of how their tinkerings with the federal budget affect average Americans, one stands alone. That's the proposal to change the formula that determines annual cost-of-living increases for people on Social Security. At the heart of this particular change is an inflation indicator known as the chained consumer price index. You may have heard the term bandied about, along with the claim that it's more accurate at measuring inflation than the plain-vanilla versions of the CPI used today for inflation adjustments in Social Security, the income tax and other federal programs. First published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in 2002, the chained CPI was designed to adjust for the ways real-life consumers compensate when a product or service gets more expensive: They buy less of it, or find a cheaper brand, or find something different, or go without. The phenomenon is known as "substitution." Economists fear that an inflation index that ignores substitution might overstate the real cost of living because it will include products in its market basket that consumers have tossed out of theirs. The example favored by BLS analysts is ice cream — as it rises in price, the analysts observe, consumers will buy a pint instead of a quart, or buy a store brand instead of Breyers, or shop for it at Costco instead of Ralphs. For budget cutters, the charm of the chained CPI is that it consistently rises at a lower rate than the traditional CPI, differing by two- to three-tenths of a percentage point per year. Social Security's own actuaries have calculated that pegging cost-of-living increases to the chained CPI would cut seniors' benefits by nearly 10% over any 30-year span, compared with the current formula. For the average retiree reaching age 85, the change would amount to an annual cut of nearly $1,000; by age 95, the reduction would rise to nearly $1,400. Over the next 10 years, according to the nonpartisan National Academy of Social Insurance, the change would cut total Social Security benefits by $112 billion. The idea of using the chained CPI to cut Social Security benefits has built up a dangerous head of steam in Washington. It even came up during President Obama's news conference on Monday, though he nimbly dodged the issue. In the GOP-controlled House of Representatives, it's the flavor of the month in all budget debates. It came up last week at a House Ways and Means Committee hearing on Social Security, for instance. Asked to illustrate how the chained CPI works, the eminent economist Sylvester Schieber skipped over the BLS' ice cream model and went with this one: "If the price of a Mercedes goes up … maybe you don't buy the Mercedes, you switch and you buy an Audi or something." It's hard to say whether this was a real-life event for Schieber, who works for the corporate consulting firm Watson Wyatt Worldwide, or whether he thought that a parable about substitution in the luxury car market would hit the potentates on the Ways and Means Committee where they lived. But here's the punch line: Schieber was wrong, or at least wildly misleading. The sort of substitution he was talking about, within categories of goods such as new cars, is already baked into the standard CPI and has been since 1999. The chained CPI addresses the more painful substitutions that occur across categories — a more accurate example might be that if the price of gas or medical care goes up, you cut back on food. But since members of Congress are often transported at government expense, receive government medical coverage and have lobbyists to pick up their restaurant tabs, maybe Schieber knew his audience. A more important issue is whether the chained CPI really is the best measure of the cost of living for Social Security recipients. There are grounds to doubt that it is. It's not at all certain that elderly persons on fixed incomes can make the sort of lifestyle changes contemplated by the chained CPI, or even the standard CPI, as easily as other consumers. That's because a larger portion of seniors' spending is concentrated in medical goods and services, which aren't as amenable to substitution as, say, oranges for apples; it's not as though you can forgo a prescribed heart bypass operation and opt for a cheaper hernia operation instead. Indeed, the BLS has recognized that elderly consumers are a special case by developing an experimental CPI, known as the CPI-E, just for those 62 and older. Among other differences, the index overweights medical care as a factor in seniors' spending. That component, which has risen in cost at nearly twice the rate of overall inflation over the last couple of decades, counts for more than twice as much of the CPI-E as it does of the standard CPI used to calculate Social Security cost-of-living raises today. That helps explain why the CPI-E rose nearly 7% faster than the standard CPI from 1998 through 2009, according to government estimates. It also tells you why, from the standpoint of seniors' real cost of living, the chained CPI is a rip-off. When you factor in that two-thirds of our retirees get most of their income from Social Security — and for one-third of retirees the program accounts for 90% of their income — you can see that the chained-CPI proposal is nothing but a stealth benefit cut aimed at the neediest Americans, and one that weighs ever more heavily as people grow older, and needier. But the sad truth is that the proposal to link Social Security inflation protection to the chained CPI isn't really about making annual cost-of-living increases more "accurate." That's mere window dressing. The goal is to cut benefits and thereby cut government costs. As has been the case throughout the discussion in Washington about the budget and the federal deficit, the guiding principle here has been to preserve benefits for the wealthy at the expense of everyone else. How do we know this? If you use the chained CPI instead of the standard CPI for the annual adjustment in income tax brackets, over time that will create an effective tax increase, especially for wealthier taxpayers. (That's because the bracket thresholds will rise more slowly relative to inflation than they do now.) The gain for the Treasury would be about $72 billion over 10 years, according to the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation. What do the agents of the wealthy say about that? Let's ask the right-wing Cato Institute, which cherishes both a sedulous admiration for free enterprise and a long-standing hostility to Social Security. Cato last year called switching to the chained CPI for Social Security a "sound and overdue reform." But when it came to using the chained CPI to adjust tax brackets, Cato called that "a very bad idea." One would think it only fair that if you change the inflation index for one government program, you should do so for all of them. It's a measure of the cynicism that guides debate in the nation's capital that an "overdue reform" that would take $112 billion from the needy can be regarded as "a very bad idea" if it costs the rich $72 billion — and that no one pauses to ponder the rank injustice involved. Must be that they can't make out their own words over the purring of those Mercedes engines. Michael Hiltzik's column appears Sundays and Wednesdays. Reach him at mhiltzik@latimes.com, read past columns at latimes.com/hiltzik, check out facebook.com/hiltzik and follow @latimeshiltzik on Twitter.
CATEGORY: [Budget], [entitlement reform], [Social Security]


Comments

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  1. Lloyd Aus's avatar Lloyd Aus said on 6/27/2012 6:16 PM: Reply  
    I think the politicians are doing all they can to take advantage of seniors. I think that Congress should quit trying to accomplish everything with the budget and debt limit at once. I think that we all need and deserve to continue to function while the politicians play games with each other. I think that since nothing has been accomplished yet that Congress and the President should be the firts to suffer financial consequences. They have done no meaningful work since being elected and are ready to let out country and its seniors go into default. All politicians should give what they have earned so far (?} bacl the government to pay down the deficit and thus suffer a little themselves. All current politicians should not be re-elected in 2012. A new party of the people should be formed to take votes from all the dems and GOP and possibly get elected. Someone who is willing to work for the people to solve these problems and not be campaigning for a 2012 election when they haven't solved the budget crisis. Soon we are going to worse off than many of the foreign countries. At least Gov. Dayton of Minnesota is going to give in to the Minnesota GOP so the damage to Minnesota will end. I hope in the 2012 election all current politicians from the President on down are replaced by people that really care about seniors and the United States.
  2. Ron Patrick's avatar Ron Patrick said on 6/27/2012 6:16 PM: Reply  
    We MUST mobilize... in the streets and in the voting booth! We cannot sit silent and idly by while these tea-bag carpetbaggers ravage and plunder Social Security and Medicare in the name of saving rich people and corporations from paying their fair share of taxes. Wheelchairs to the street! Revolt is the only thing that will stop these people... clear, loud, relentless ... RELENTLESS REVOLT. No handwringing... smart revolt and kicking these people out of office. Wisconsin has already successfully mounted a Republican recall effort that has resulted in a new primary and a new election August 1. Reasonable people will SOON fill these Wisconsinb house and senate seats instead of the idealogues and the rich. If your state's constitution does not allow public officials to be recalled for a breach of the public trust, then those constitutions must be changed. We have the power to kick these people out of our government, and we need to exert that power! NOW!
  3. B. Harding's avatar B. Harding said on 6/27/2012 6:16 PM: Reply  
    I emailed my Republican Senator not to cut COLA for 2012. He emailed me back "what COLA, there is no COLA for 2012". What does that tell all of us?!?!
  4. barbara Purr's avatar barbara Purr said on 6/27/2012 6:16 PM: Reply  
    Shame on the government for expecting me, a senior who worked in a factories and washed dishes in diners for 40 years, to move into an even smaller place than the 3 rooms I have and cut yet more things from my budget which is very meager as it is. Shame on them all. I hope their money takes them far when thousands of senior citizens stop buying and spending our money on their products.
  5. Roger Yandell's avatar Roger Yandell said on 6/27/2012 6:16 PM: Reply  
    I stopped giving to charities when bush cut taxes and gave all that surplus to the awful wealthy people. I stopped giving aid to people I do not know except in emergencys. I tell them if they voted for the evil republicans they need to go to a church for help. If the church will not help them, then they are supposed to perish. That is the republican platform in action.
  6. lou kocsis's avatar lou kocsis said on 6/27/2012 6:16 PM: Reply  
    Those in power will not deprive themselves!
  7. lou kocsis's avatar lou kocsis said on 6/27/2012 6:16 PM: Reply  
    I wrote a longer reply; however, it boils down to who has the dollars and will not allow the ordinary citizen to prevent any limitation of political action!

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