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Blog2023-02-16T14:29:22-04:00
1511, 2021

Biden Signs Bipartisan Infrastructure Plan; Seniors Will Benefit

By |November 15th, 2021|Democrats, Infrastructure, President Biden, Republicans, Social Security, stimulus, Uncategorized|

President Biden signed into law today a bipartisan bill unleashing more than one trillion dollars to rebuild America’s crumbling infrastructure. While not specifically targeted to seniors, the infrastructure plan will help older Americans both directly and indirectly.  The plan provides funding for improved public transportation, housing, and high-speed internet access – all of which seniors depend on. When these infrastructure items improve, so does seniors’ quality of life.

The infrastructure plan will also boost Social Security, says Max Richtman, President and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare:

“The bipartisan infrastructure plan that President Biden just signed into law will do more than build roads, bridges, and broadband.  It also will give a big boost to Americans’ retirement security. That’s because the new, higher-paying jobs the infrastructure plan will create means more money flowing into Social Security through increased payroll contributions. This new revenue can help extend the solvency of the Social Security trust fund, currently projected to become depleted in 2034.” – Max Richtman, NCPSSM President & CEO, 11/15/21   

Just as importantly, the Biden plan will increase the potential for bigger Social Security benefits for workers who get new and better-paying jobs. Higher pay and longer work histories add up to larger Social Security checks.  That’s welcome news at a time when more and more seniors rely on Social Security for all or most of their income.

Higher benefits ultimately help everyone – not just beneficiaries – because of Social Security’s stimulus effect on the overall economy.

“Social Security’s positive economic impact shouldn’t be ignored. American families spend more than $1 trillion in Social Security benefits nationwide each year, providing more than $1.6 trillion in economic stimulus to the national economy every year.” – BoostSocialSecurityNow.org

In fact, the National Committee offers a state-by-state breakdown of Social Security’s economic stimulus effect at socialsecurityspotlight.org.

Unlike the Build Back Better plan, a sweeping social safety net bill which will more directly benefit seniors, some Republicans did join Democrats in voting for the President’s infrastructure legislation.  And while the Build Back Better plan will only succeed on a party-line vote in the absence of Republican support, the National Committee commends a rare moment of bipartisanship on behalf of rebuilding the country’s infrastructure.

“We applaud the Republicans and Democrats in Congress who joined together to pass this historic legislation — and President Biden for putting it forward.  This is exactly what a government that works for the people – both the young and the old – is supposed to do.” – Max Richtman


311, 2021

Democrats’ New Prescription Drug Plan More than a ‘Glass Half Full’

By |November 3rd, 2021|Congress, Democrats, Prescription Drug Prices, President Biden|

For American seniors, the Democrats’ new agreement on prescription drug pricing reform is definitely more than a glass half full.  It is not everything that advocates had hoped for, but it is a historic step toward taming soaring drug prices that force too many seniors to forgo vital medications. Party leaders announced an agreement on Thursday night as part of ongoing efforts to pass President Biden’s Build Back Better plan.

“Fixing prescription drug pricing has consistently been a top issue for Americans year-after-year, including the vast majority of both Democrats and Republican (voters) who want to see a change because they simply cannot afford their medications,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, 11/2/21

The agreement would for the first time allow Medicare to negotiate the price of some drugs with Big Pharma. It would also cap seniors’ out-of-pocket drug costs at $2,000 per year. (The current cap is $6,500 annually.)  Drug-makers also would be required to pay rebates for any price hikes exceeding the rate of inflation.

 “While not nearly as expansive as we had originally proposed, I’m hopeful the agreement’s new inflation rebate and out-of-pocket cap for seniors will work in tandem with Medicare’s negotiation authority to meaningfully lower prescription drug costs for Americans.” – Frank Pallone, Chairman, House Energy & Commerce Committee, 11/2/21

The agreement represents at least a partial victory over Big Pharma, a lobbying behemoth which has pressured many lawmakers to oppose robust drug pricing reform – not to mention the industry’s barrage of misleading television ads to try to convince the public that reform is bad for consumers.  Typically, drug-makers have labeled the Democrats latest plan “disastrous.” In truth, it will only be disastrous for Big Pharma if it insists on squeezing maximal profits through prescription price gouging.

Democrats are confident about the plan’s passage now that holdout Senator Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) has agreed to it. Her spokesperson says that “the Senator welcomes a new agreement on a historic, transformative Medicare drug negotiation plan that will reduce out-of-pocket costs for seniors.”

Moderate Democrats who blanched at a more comprehensive Medicare negotiation plan also signed onto the new agreement.  They include Rep. Scott Peters (D-OH), Kurt Schrader (D-OR), Stephanie Murphy (D-FL), and Kathleen Rice (D-NY).

The National Committee and other seniors’ advocacy groups have long fought for meaningful prescription drug pricing reform.  NCPSSM enthusiastically supported H.R. 3, the Elijah Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act, which was introduced during the 116th Congress.  Advocates’ hopes burned high when Democrats won the White House and took control of the Senate in 2020, seeing it as the best opportunity in more than a generation to lower drug prices.  But opposition from moderates in the House and Senate forced party leaders to scale back their plans for comprehensive reform.

Holdout Senator Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) has signed onto the party’s latest drug pricing reform plan

Yesterday’s announcement breathed new life into the party’s efforts to lower drug prices.

“It isn’t all we hoped it would be, but at least it opens the door for Medicare drug negotiation,” says Dan Adcock, the National Committee’s director of government relations and policy. “And the out-of-pocket cost cap for seniors is very significant, especially when you consider that one million Medicare beneficiaries, many of whom live on fixed incomes, are currently paying $3,200 or more a year for prescription drugs.”

Adcock expects the new drug reform plan to pass both Houses of Congress, now that moderates who opposed it are on board. “Politics is the art of the possible,” he says, “And this is what appears to be possible for now.”


2610, 2021

Rep. Larson Introduces Social Security 2100: A Sacred Trust bill

By |October 26th, 2021|Boost Social Security, President Biden, Rep. John Larson, Social Security|

Rep. John Larson (D-CT) introduced landmark legislation today to expand and strengthen Social Security, with leading members of the seniors’ advocacy community present – including NCPSSM president and CEO Max Richtman.  In introducing his Social Security 2100: A Sacred Trust bill, Rep. Larson said that benefits must be boosted and Social Security financially fortified:

“Every day, hard-working Americans contribute to this great program that has never missed a payment and stands as a hallmark to what good governance is about.  This bill is what the American people need and richly deserve. Now is the time for us to act.” – Rep. John Larson, 10/26/21

Congressman Larson unveiled the bill in the committee room of the House Ways and Means Social Security subcommittee, which he chairs.  Speakers at the event noted that it is the same room where Social Security and Medicare legislation was hammered out in the 1930’s and 1960’s.  Rep. Larson pointed out that Social Security benefits have not been enhanced during the past fifty years, and that many seniors are teetering on the edge of poverty — unable to make ends meet under the current benefit structure.

The bill has nearly 200 cosponsors and the enthusiastic backing of the advocacy community.  The National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare has championed the program’s expansion for many years, working closely with Rep. Larson’s office.

“To those who claim that no one in Washington has the courage to address Social Security’s challenges, or that the only solution is to cut benefits for future generations, Congressman Larson’s bill is a stunning refutation. For years, seniors and their advocates have demanded these improvements.  Rep. Larson has admirably led the charge on Capitol Hill, and with this bill, he has delivered.” – Max Richtman, NCPSSM president and CEO, 10/26/21

Larson’s fellow subcommittee members and other cosponsors of the bill praised the new bill – and Rep. Larson’s leadership on this issue:

“Social Security is one of our nation’s greatest success stories. It stands as a monument to decency and dignity, and is the birthright of every American worker. We have a sacred responsibility to assure its preservation. No one knows that better than John Larson.” – Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ), 10/26/21

The Sacred Trust legislation would boost benefits for everyone on Social Security and provide extra increases to vulnerable groups, such as widows, widowers, and low-wage workers.  Rep. Lynda Sanchez, a cosponsor of the bill, said these increases will benefit communities of color, whose lifetime earnings are lower and who typically depend on Social Security for all or most of their income. This bill, she said, “would reach down into these communities and help them live out their older years in dignity.”

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said, “Social Security helped my family through” when her father died of cancer.  Rep. Conor Lamb (center) emphasized the program’s importance to veterans.

Rep. Conor Lamb (D-PA) spoke of Social Security’s importance to disabled veterans, while Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (D-NY) reminded Millennials that they, too, benefit from the social insurance that the program provides all adults and children in the event of a loss of a spouse or family breadwinner – or when a worker becomes disabled.

“When I was a kid, my dad passed away of cancer. My mother was a domestic worker. Social Security checks helped my family through. To have that social safety net isn’t just good for us individually; it helps us feel like we are part of a society that respects our elders and values our vulnerable.” – Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), 10/26/21

The Sacred Trust bill contains several provisions that seniors and their advocates have sought for years, including:

  • An across-the-board benefit boost for all beneficiaries
  • Adoption of a fairer, more accurate COLA formula (CPI-E)
  • Improving benefits for long-serving, low-wage workers;
  • Repealing the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO) that penalize many public servants;
  • Providing caregiver credits for time taken out of the workforce to care for children and other dependents.

“Women especially will benefit from this legislation. Women often leave the workforce to take care of loved ones, which lowers their lifetime earnings on which Social Security benefits are based. Under this bill, there will be a credit for those who take time off of work, which will enhance their retirement benefits.” – Rep. Jan Schakowsky, (D-IL), 10/26/21

To pay for these improvements and forestall a projected shortfall in the Social Security trust fund in 2034, the Sacred Trust Act adjusts the wage cap so that earnings above $400,000 are subject to Social Security payroll taxes.  This is a long-overdue correction for rising income inequality, where the percentage of wages subject to Social Security payroll taxes has shrunk over the past four decades. It also aligns with President Biden’s pledge not to raise taxes on anyone earning under $400,000 per year.

“Social Security stands as a monument to decency and dignity,” said Rep. Bill Pascrell.

Rep. Larson said that he plans to hold hearings on the Sacred Trust legislation in November, followed by a markup and floor vote in the House.  The bill would need at least ten Republican votes to pass the Senate (an outcome that is far from guaranteed) and move to the President’s desk for signature. “No one understands better than President Biden that Social Security is a sacred trust between the people and their government,” said Larson.

 


2110, 2021

A Higher Minimum Wage Would Boost Women in Retirement

By |October 21st, 2021|EH Blog, Eleanors Hope, minimum wage, women, women's retirement security|

The national debate over raising the minimum wage may not seem to have much to do with retirement security.  But it truly does, especially for women —– and women of color, in particular. As the Baltimore Sun reported this week, “Female workers make up a large share of low-wage workers, so they stand to benefit from the proposed federal increase as well as from planned phased-in increases in (the states).”  The National Committee advocates for a $15 minimum/hour minimum wage, not only because we want workers to earn a living wage, but because it improves women’s retirement security.   

We asked NCPSSM senior policy analyst Maria Freese, an expert in women’s retirement issues, why a higher minimum wage is so crucial for women in the long run.  For more information, visit www.eleanorshope.org.   

How does the minimum wage affect women’s retirement security? 

A:  The primary reason is that you more you make, the more you’re likely to save for retirement. If you’re a minimum wage worker and the minimum wage goes up — and you have more money in your pocket — you’ll have more money left over to save for retirement. Women’s retirement savings rates historically have lagged behind men’s.

Why does the minimum wage affect women more than men? 

A:  Because women tend to be in jobs that pay minimum wage, especially women of color. Typical ‘job tracks’ tend to steer women toward lower-paying service and retail positions. There are many reasons for this, including discrimination and a lack of encouragement and training for some women to seek more professional-level work that pays more.

Does the minimum wage affect retirement security in other ways?  

A:  Yes. It helps hourly wage-earners who have retirement plans at work (such as 401Ks), which are based on a percentage of wages. If your wages go up, your dollar amount contribution to the 401K goes up automatically.  You don’t even have to make a change in your 401K plan for that to happen.

How does the minimum wage affect Social Security benefits? 

A:   Social Security benefits are based on lifetime earnings. If the minimum wage goes up, then many hourly workers earning the minimum wage will receive higher Social Security benefits when they retire.

How would a rise in the minimum wage benefit non-minimum wage earners? 

A:  There is a linkage between the wages of hourly workers at any given employer and what the employer pays salaried workers. Generally, the higher the wages at the bottom of the ladder, the better the pay at higher levels.  It’s a ‘rising tide lifts all boats’ situation. So even if you don’t earn the minimum wage, your pay may go up if the minimum wage increases.

Many in the business community have claimed that raising the minimum wage to $15/hour would kill jobs and drive people out of business.  What is your response to that? 

A:  It’s a myth. Not true.  Real-world experience does not bear that out. Look at Washington state, for example. The state raised the minimum wage to nearly $15 an hour, and we have not seen an outflow of businesses or precipitous falloff in jobs (unrelated to the pandemic) compared with other states. In fact, from all indications, the business climate in Washington state (with its higher minimum wage) is very good.

Has there been any progress in Congress on raising the federal minimum wage from the current $7.50/hour? 

A: Not much, unfortunately.  A $15 federal minimum wage was part of President Biden’s original Build Back Better agenda, but the Senate parliamentarian ruled that the minimum wage couldn’t be raised through the budget reconciliation process — the vehicle that Democrats are using to enact other parts of the President’s agenda on a simple, party-line vote.  It appears that enough Republicans would have to vote for a higher minimum wage in order for the measure to pass the Senate. There is more than one bill to do so in Congress, but don’t expect them to go too far until the makeup of the Senate changes.  In the meantime, we’ll keep fighting for it.

Visit www.eleanorshope.org for more information!

 

 

 


1510, 2021

Dems Should Unite Around Medicare Expansion, RX Drug Price Negotiation

By |October 15th, 2021|Congress, Medicare, Medicare Drug Coverage and Costs, Polls, Prescription Drug Prices, President Biden|

***This is an update of a previous Entitled to Know blog post.***

For years, we have been advocating for the expansion of seniors’ Medicare benefits.  Traditional Medicare doesn’t cover basic dental, hearing, or vision care – which are the gateways to good health. Many seniors on fixed incomes simply can’t afford this kind of care on their own, so they skip visits to the eye doctor, the audiologist, or the dentist.  We and other seniors’ advocates cheered President Biden’s Build Back Better plan, which called for adding dental, vision, and hearing coverage to Medicare.  That plan is having a difficult birth in Congress, as moderate and Progressive Democrats wrangle over the plan’s size and scope, in anticipation of passing it via the budget reconciliation process.

Democratic leadership has set its sights on a possible vote on the package by the end of October, but some Hill-watchers believe that may be an overly optimistic target – as the party’s factions seem no closer to agreement than they were a few weeks ago. Meanwhile, seniors and their advocates anxiously await the outcome – hoping that long sought-after Medicare expansions will finally be enacted – and knowing that there is a limited window of opportunity to get it done, given that Democrats may lose control of one or both houses of Congress in 2022.

Policy analysts say that the most endangered of the potential new benefits is dental care, because it likely would be the most costly of the putative Medicare expansions – and would take the longest to get up and running.  Dental coverage also faces dogged opposition from the American Dental Association (ADA), which is lobbying hard against it. Some Democrats have proposed dental vouchers as a compromise measure that could be activated much more quickly than a full-out dental benefit. But seniors’ advocates are wary of vouchers, because dentists could simply increase their prices significantly above the value of the vouchers, negating any serious net out-of-pocket savings for patients.  Vouchers are also regarded as a big step toward privatization of Medicare, which advocates and the majority of the public rightly oppose. The ADA (and some Democrats) have even proposed the wrong-headed idea of means-testing any new benefits – so that only the poorest of beneficiaries would be eligible.

These roadblocks to Medicare expansion could have grave real-life consequences.  Forgoing dental, vision, and hearing care increases seniors’ risk of serious injury and other health issues, which endangers beneficiaries and costs Medicare even more in the long run.

One thing is clear:  the public wants Medicare expanded. According to a new Morning Consult poll, 84% of voters support adding dental, vision and hearing coverage to traditional Medicare.  That number includes 79% percent of Republicans.  Clearly, there is immense bipartisan support among everyday Americans for giving seniors these crucial coverages.

Morning Consult poll

Originally, Democrats wanted to pay for expanding Medicare with savings achieved through prescription drug pricing reform.  The House-passed Elijah Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act (H.R.3) would save Medicare some $450 billion over ten years, mainly by allowing the program to negotiate prices directly with Big Pharma.  But Democratic centrists in both chambers have balked at Medicare price negotiation, leaving the fate of the measure uncertain.  Analysts say that a compromise negotiation measure may emerge, but that it could have less impact on actual drug prices.

On this issue, the public has made its preferences crystal clear. Poll indicates that a majority of voters across party lines support Medicare drug price negotiations.  Republicans in Congress have called this commonsense proposal “Socialism,” even though the V.A. has been negotiating prices with drug-makers for years – and realizing significant savings in the process.  According to one analysis, Medicare could save some 40% in drug costs if it were allowed to negotiate as the V.A. does.  Of course, Big Pharma has launched an expensive lobbying effort and ad blitz against Medicare negotiation.

If drug pricing legislation is weakened in the budget reconciliation process, there will be less savings to the Medicare program.  According to Adcock, that may limit the scope of dental, hearing, and vision coverage that can be added to Medicare.  In fact, one or more of those coverages may not make it into the final legislation if there aren’t sufficient Medicare savings to pay for them.

“It’s possible we will see Medicare expansion enacted by the end of the year. It depends on how the Democrats are able to finesse this process. I wouldn’t bet the farm on it, but there’s a decent chance we’ll get something.” – Dan Adcock, NCPSSM Director of Government Relations and Policy

Seniors and their advocates will be understandably frustrated and disappointed if this historic opportunity to expand Medicare and tame Big Pharma price increases slips away because of intra-party conflicts. Voters delivered the White House and the House and Senate to Democrats in 2020, but left the party with slim majorities leaving little room for defections.  As one analyst puts it, “Trying to do transformational change with a razor thin majority was going to be a daunting task in the first place. It’s going to remain an uphill slog.”  We hope that Congress will keep slogging until seniors receive the coverage expansions they need to stay healthy — and some sorely-needed relief from soaring drug prices.


Biden Signs Bipartisan Infrastructure Plan; Seniors Will Benefit

By |November 15th, 2021|Democrats, Infrastructure, President Biden, Republicans, Social Security, stimulus, Uncategorized|

President Biden signed into law today a bipartisan bill unleashing more than one trillion dollars to rebuild America’s crumbling infrastructure. While not specifically targeted to seniors, the infrastructure plan will help older Americans both directly and indirectly.  The plan provides funding for improved public transportation, housing, and high-speed internet access – all of which seniors depend on. When these infrastructure items improve, so does seniors’ quality of life.

The infrastructure plan will also boost Social Security, says Max Richtman, President and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare:

“The bipartisan infrastructure plan that President Biden just signed into law will do more than build roads, bridges, and broadband.  It also will give a big boost to Americans’ retirement security. That’s because the new, higher-paying jobs the infrastructure plan will create means more money flowing into Social Security through increased payroll contributions. This new revenue can help extend the solvency of the Social Security trust fund, currently projected to become depleted in 2034.” – Max Richtman, NCPSSM President & CEO, 11/15/21   

Just as importantly, the Biden plan will increase the potential for bigger Social Security benefits for workers who get new and better-paying jobs. Higher pay and longer work histories add up to larger Social Security checks.  That’s welcome news at a time when more and more seniors rely on Social Security for all or most of their income.

Higher benefits ultimately help everyone – not just beneficiaries – because of Social Security’s stimulus effect on the overall economy.

“Social Security’s positive economic impact shouldn’t be ignored. American families spend more than $1 trillion in Social Security benefits nationwide each year, providing more than $1.6 trillion in economic stimulus to the national economy every year.” – BoostSocialSecurityNow.org

In fact, the National Committee offers a state-by-state breakdown of Social Security’s economic stimulus effect at socialsecurityspotlight.org.

Unlike the Build Back Better plan, a sweeping social safety net bill which will more directly benefit seniors, some Republicans did join Democrats in voting for the President’s infrastructure legislation.  And while the Build Back Better plan will only succeed on a party-line vote in the absence of Republican support, the National Committee commends a rare moment of bipartisanship on behalf of rebuilding the country’s infrastructure.

“We applaud the Republicans and Democrats in Congress who joined together to pass this historic legislation — and President Biden for putting it forward.  This is exactly what a government that works for the people – both the young and the old – is supposed to do.” – Max Richtman


Democrats’ New Prescription Drug Plan More than a ‘Glass Half Full’

By |November 3rd, 2021|Congress, Democrats, Prescription Drug Prices, President Biden|

For American seniors, the Democrats’ new agreement on prescription drug pricing reform is definitely more than a glass half full.  It is not everything that advocates had hoped for, but it is a historic step toward taming soaring drug prices that force too many seniors to forgo vital medications. Party leaders announced an agreement on Thursday night as part of ongoing efforts to pass President Biden’s Build Back Better plan.

“Fixing prescription drug pricing has consistently been a top issue for Americans year-after-year, including the vast majority of both Democrats and Republican (voters) who want to see a change because they simply cannot afford their medications,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, 11/2/21

The agreement would for the first time allow Medicare to negotiate the price of some drugs with Big Pharma. It would also cap seniors’ out-of-pocket drug costs at $2,000 per year. (The current cap is $6,500 annually.)  Drug-makers also would be required to pay rebates for any price hikes exceeding the rate of inflation.

 “While not nearly as expansive as we had originally proposed, I’m hopeful the agreement’s new inflation rebate and out-of-pocket cap for seniors will work in tandem with Medicare’s negotiation authority to meaningfully lower prescription drug costs for Americans.” – Frank Pallone, Chairman, House Energy & Commerce Committee, 11/2/21

The agreement represents at least a partial victory over Big Pharma, a lobbying behemoth which has pressured many lawmakers to oppose robust drug pricing reform – not to mention the industry’s barrage of misleading television ads to try to convince the public that reform is bad for consumers.  Typically, drug-makers have labeled the Democrats latest plan “disastrous.” In truth, it will only be disastrous for Big Pharma if it insists on squeezing maximal profits through prescription price gouging.

Democrats are confident about the plan’s passage now that holdout Senator Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) has agreed to it. Her spokesperson says that “the Senator welcomes a new agreement on a historic, transformative Medicare drug negotiation plan that will reduce out-of-pocket costs for seniors.”

Moderate Democrats who blanched at a more comprehensive Medicare negotiation plan also signed onto the new agreement.  They include Rep. Scott Peters (D-OH), Kurt Schrader (D-OR), Stephanie Murphy (D-FL), and Kathleen Rice (D-NY).

The National Committee and other seniors’ advocacy groups have long fought for meaningful prescription drug pricing reform.  NCPSSM enthusiastically supported H.R. 3, the Elijah Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act, which was introduced during the 116th Congress.  Advocates’ hopes burned high when Democrats won the White House and took control of the Senate in 2020, seeing it as the best opportunity in more than a generation to lower drug prices.  But opposition from moderates in the House and Senate forced party leaders to scale back their plans for comprehensive reform.

Holdout Senator Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) has signed onto the party’s latest drug pricing reform plan

Yesterday’s announcement breathed new life into the party’s efforts to lower drug prices.

“It isn’t all we hoped it would be, but at least it opens the door for Medicare drug negotiation,” says Dan Adcock, the National Committee’s director of government relations and policy. “And the out-of-pocket cost cap for seniors is very significant, especially when you consider that one million Medicare beneficiaries, many of whom live on fixed incomes, are currently paying $3,200 or more a year for prescription drugs.”

Adcock expects the new drug reform plan to pass both Houses of Congress, now that moderates who opposed it are on board. “Politics is the art of the possible,” he says, “And this is what appears to be possible for now.”


Rep. Larson Introduces Social Security 2100: A Sacred Trust bill

By |October 26th, 2021|Boost Social Security, President Biden, Rep. John Larson, Social Security|

Rep. John Larson (D-CT) introduced landmark legislation today to expand and strengthen Social Security, with leading members of the seniors’ advocacy community present – including NCPSSM president and CEO Max Richtman.  In introducing his Social Security 2100: A Sacred Trust bill, Rep. Larson said that benefits must be boosted and Social Security financially fortified:

“Every day, hard-working Americans contribute to this great program that has never missed a payment and stands as a hallmark to what good governance is about.  This bill is what the American people need and richly deserve. Now is the time for us to act.” – Rep. John Larson, 10/26/21

Congressman Larson unveiled the bill in the committee room of the House Ways and Means Social Security subcommittee, which he chairs.  Speakers at the event noted that it is the same room where Social Security and Medicare legislation was hammered out in the 1930’s and 1960’s.  Rep. Larson pointed out that Social Security benefits have not been enhanced during the past fifty years, and that many seniors are teetering on the edge of poverty — unable to make ends meet under the current benefit structure.

The bill has nearly 200 cosponsors and the enthusiastic backing of the advocacy community.  The National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare has championed the program’s expansion for many years, working closely with Rep. Larson’s office.

“To those who claim that no one in Washington has the courage to address Social Security’s challenges, or that the only solution is to cut benefits for future generations, Congressman Larson’s bill is a stunning refutation. For years, seniors and their advocates have demanded these improvements.  Rep. Larson has admirably led the charge on Capitol Hill, and with this bill, he has delivered.” – Max Richtman, NCPSSM president and CEO, 10/26/21

Larson’s fellow subcommittee members and other cosponsors of the bill praised the new bill – and Rep. Larson’s leadership on this issue:

“Social Security is one of our nation’s greatest success stories. It stands as a monument to decency and dignity, and is the birthright of every American worker. We have a sacred responsibility to assure its preservation. No one knows that better than John Larson.” – Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ), 10/26/21

The Sacred Trust legislation would boost benefits for everyone on Social Security and provide extra increases to vulnerable groups, such as widows, widowers, and low-wage workers.  Rep. Lynda Sanchez, a cosponsor of the bill, said these increases will benefit communities of color, whose lifetime earnings are lower and who typically depend on Social Security for all or most of their income. This bill, she said, “would reach down into these communities and help them live out their older years in dignity.”

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said, “Social Security helped my family through” when her father died of cancer.  Rep. Conor Lamb (center) emphasized the program’s importance to veterans.

Rep. Conor Lamb (D-PA) spoke of Social Security’s importance to disabled veterans, while Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (D-NY) reminded Millennials that they, too, benefit from the social insurance that the program provides all adults and children in the event of a loss of a spouse or family breadwinner – or when a worker becomes disabled.

“When I was a kid, my dad passed away of cancer. My mother was a domestic worker. Social Security checks helped my family through. To have that social safety net isn’t just good for us individually; it helps us feel like we are part of a society that respects our elders and values our vulnerable.” – Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), 10/26/21

The Sacred Trust bill contains several provisions that seniors and their advocates have sought for years, including:

  • An across-the-board benefit boost for all beneficiaries
  • Adoption of a fairer, more accurate COLA formula (CPI-E)
  • Improving benefits for long-serving, low-wage workers;
  • Repealing the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) and Government Pension Offset (GPO) that penalize many public servants;
  • Providing caregiver credits for time taken out of the workforce to care for children and other dependents.

“Women especially will benefit from this legislation. Women often leave the workforce to take care of loved ones, which lowers their lifetime earnings on which Social Security benefits are based. Under this bill, there will be a credit for those who take time off of work, which will enhance their retirement benefits.” – Rep. Jan Schakowsky, (D-IL), 10/26/21

To pay for these improvements and forestall a projected shortfall in the Social Security trust fund in 2034, the Sacred Trust Act adjusts the wage cap so that earnings above $400,000 are subject to Social Security payroll taxes.  This is a long-overdue correction for rising income inequality, where the percentage of wages subject to Social Security payroll taxes has shrunk over the past four decades. It also aligns with President Biden’s pledge not to raise taxes on anyone earning under $400,000 per year.

“Social Security stands as a monument to decency and dignity,” said Rep. Bill Pascrell.

Rep. Larson said that he plans to hold hearings on the Sacred Trust legislation in November, followed by a markup and floor vote in the House.  The bill would need at least ten Republican votes to pass the Senate (an outcome that is far from guaranteed) and move to the President’s desk for signature. “No one understands better than President Biden that Social Security is a sacred trust between the people and their government,” said Larson.

 


A Higher Minimum Wage Would Boost Women in Retirement

By |October 21st, 2021|EH Blog, Eleanors Hope, minimum wage, women, women's retirement security|

The national debate over raising the minimum wage may not seem to have much to do with retirement security.  But it truly does, especially for women —– and women of color, in particular. As the Baltimore Sun reported this week, “Female workers make up a large share of low-wage workers, so they stand to benefit from the proposed federal increase as well as from planned phased-in increases in (the states).”  The National Committee advocates for a $15 minimum/hour minimum wage, not only because we want workers to earn a living wage, but because it improves women’s retirement security.   

We asked NCPSSM senior policy analyst Maria Freese, an expert in women’s retirement issues, why a higher minimum wage is so crucial for women in the long run.  For more information, visit www.eleanorshope.org.   

How does the minimum wage affect women’s retirement security? 

A:  The primary reason is that you more you make, the more you’re likely to save for retirement. If you’re a minimum wage worker and the minimum wage goes up — and you have more money in your pocket — you’ll have more money left over to save for retirement. Women’s retirement savings rates historically have lagged behind men’s.

Why does the minimum wage affect women more than men? 

A:  Because women tend to be in jobs that pay minimum wage, especially women of color. Typical ‘job tracks’ tend to steer women toward lower-paying service and retail positions. There are many reasons for this, including discrimination and a lack of encouragement and training for some women to seek more professional-level work that pays more.

Does the minimum wage affect retirement security in other ways?  

A:  Yes. It helps hourly wage-earners who have retirement plans at work (such as 401Ks), which are based on a percentage of wages. If your wages go up, your dollar amount contribution to the 401K goes up automatically.  You don’t even have to make a change in your 401K plan for that to happen.

How does the minimum wage affect Social Security benefits? 

A:   Social Security benefits are based on lifetime earnings. If the minimum wage goes up, then many hourly workers earning the minimum wage will receive higher Social Security benefits when they retire.

How would a rise in the minimum wage benefit non-minimum wage earners? 

A:  There is a linkage between the wages of hourly workers at any given employer and what the employer pays salaried workers. Generally, the higher the wages at the bottom of the ladder, the better the pay at higher levels.  It’s a ‘rising tide lifts all boats’ situation. So even if you don’t earn the minimum wage, your pay may go up if the minimum wage increases.

Many in the business community have claimed that raising the minimum wage to $15/hour would kill jobs and drive people out of business.  What is your response to that? 

A:  It’s a myth. Not true.  Real-world experience does not bear that out. Look at Washington state, for example. The state raised the minimum wage to nearly $15 an hour, and we have not seen an outflow of businesses or precipitous falloff in jobs (unrelated to the pandemic) compared with other states. In fact, from all indications, the business climate in Washington state (with its higher minimum wage) is very good.

Has there been any progress in Congress on raising the federal minimum wage from the current $7.50/hour? 

A: Not much, unfortunately.  A $15 federal minimum wage was part of President Biden’s original Build Back Better agenda, but the Senate parliamentarian ruled that the minimum wage couldn’t be raised through the budget reconciliation process — the vehicle that Democrats are using to enact other parts of the President’s agenda on a simple, party-line vote.  It appears that enough Republicans would have to vote for a higher minimum wage in order for the measure to pass the Senate. There is more than one bill to do so in Congress, but don’t expect them to go too far until the makeup of the Senate changes.  In the meantime, we’ll keep fighting for it.

Visit www.eleanorshope.org for more information!

 

 

 


Dems Should Unite Around Medicare Expansion, RX Drug Price Negotiation

By |October 15th, 2021|Congress, Medicare, Medicare Drug Coverage and Costs, Polls, Prescription Drug Prices, President Biden|

***This is an update of a previous Entitled to Know blog post.***

For years, we have been advocating for the expansion of seniors’ Medicare benefits.  Traditional Medicare doesn’t cover basic dental, hearing, or vision care – which are the gateways to good health. Many seniors on fixed incomes simply can’t afford this kind of care on their own, so they skip visits to the eye doctor, the audiologist, or the dentist.  We and other seniors’ advocates cheered President Biden’s Build Back Better plan, which called for adding dental, vision, and hearing coverage to Medicare.  That plan is having a difficult birth in Congress, as moderate and Progressive Democrats wrangle over the plan’s size and scope, in anticipation of passing it via the budget reconciliation process.

Democratic leadership has set its sights on a possible vote on the package by the end of October, but some Hill-watchers believe that may be an overly optimistic target – as the party’s factions seem no closer to agreement than they were a few weeks ago. Meanwhile, seniors and their advocates anxiously await the outcome – hoping that long sought-after Medicare expansions will finally be enacted – and knowing that there is a limited window of opportunity to get it done, given that Democrats may lose control of one or both houses of Congress in 2022.

Policy analysts say that the most endangered of the potential new benefits is dental care, because it likely would be the most costly of the putative Medicare expansions – and would take the longest to get up and running.  Dental coverage also faces dogged opposition from the American Dental Association (ADA), which is lobbying hard against it. Some Democrats have proposed dental vouchers as a compromise measure that could be activated much more quickly than a full-out dental benefit. But seniors’ advocates are wary of vouchers, because dentists could simply increase their prices significantly above the value of the vouchers, negating any serious net out-of-pocket savings for patients.  Vouchers are also regarded as a big step toward privatization of Medicare, which advocates and the majority of the public rightly oppose. The ADA (and some Democrats) have even proposed the wrong-headed idea of means-testing any new benefits – so that only the poorest of beneficiaries would be eligible.

These roadblocks to Medicare expansion could have grave real-life consequences.  Forgoing dental, vision, and hearing care increases seniors’ risk of serious injury and other health issues, which endangers beneficiaries and costs Medicare even more in the long run.

One thing is clear:  the public wants Medicare expanded. According to a new Morning Consult poll, 84% of voters support adding dental, vision and hearing coverage to traditional Medicare.  That number includes 79% percent of Republicans.  Clearly, there is immense bipartisan support among everyday Americans for giving seniors these crucial coverages.

Morning Consult poll

Originally, Democrats wanted to pay for expanding Medicare with savings achieved through prescription drug pricing reform.  The House-passed Elijah Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act (H.R.3) would save Medicare some $450 billion over ten years, mainly by allowing the program to negotiate prices directly with Big Pharma.  But Democratic centrists in both chambers have balked at Medicare price negotiation, leaving the fate of the measure uncertain.  Analysts say that a compromise negotiation measure may emerge, but that it could have less impact on actual drug prices.

On this issue, the public has made its preferences crystal clear. Poll indicates that a majority of voters across party lines support Medicare drug price negotiations.  Republicans in Congress have called this commonsense proposal “Socialism,” even though the V.A. has been negotiating prices with drug-makers for years – and realizing significant savings in the process.  According to one analysis, Medicare could save some 40% in drug costs if it were allowed to negotiate as the V.A. does.  Of course, Big Pharma has launched an expensive lobbying effort and ad blitz against Medicare negotiation.

If drug pricing legislation is weakened in the budget reconciliation process, there will be less savings to the Medicare program.  According to Adcock, that may limit the scope of dental, hearing, and vision coverage that can be added to Medicare.  In fact, one or more of those coverages may not make it into the final legislation if there aren’t sufficient Medicare savings to pay for them.

“It’s possible we will see Medicare expansion enacted by the end of the year. It depends on how the Democrats are able to finesse this process. I wouldn’t bet the farm on it, but there’s a decent chance we’ll get something.” – Dan Adcock, NCPSSM Director of Government Relations and Policy

Seniors and their advocates will be understandably frustrated and disappointed if this historic opportunity to expand Medicare and tame Big Pharma price increases slips away because of intra-party conflicts. Voters delivered the White House and the House and Senate to Democrats in 2020, but left the party with slim majorities leaving little room for defections.  As one analyst puts it, “Trying to do transformational change with a razor thin majority was going to be a daunting task in the first place. It’s going to remain an uphill slog.”  We hope that Congress will keep slogging until seniors receive the coverage expansions they need to stay healthy — and some sorely-needed relief from soaring drug prices.



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