One idea for cutting Social Security
that's gaining popularity in Washington would hurt the elderly, especially
older women.
By Martha Burk
Despite
the fact that Social Security isn’t contributing a penny to the federal budget
deficit, fiscal hawks have convinced President Barack Obama that we must slash
its benefits to save the country. He’s joined the sky-is-falling crew in a
crazed search for targeted cuts that will shrink Social Security outlays.
One
idea he’s considering is a magic trick known as “chained CPI.”
Most
people don’t understand the economic-speak well enough to grasp what this
sleight of hand would do to your Social Security check.
Here’s how it works.
Here’s how it works.
Social
Security benefits are periodically raised as inflation goes up. This is logical
because, like everyone else, retirees need more money to buy goods and services
when prices rise. The increase is called the annual cost-of-living adjustment
(COLA). This variable has always been calculated using something called the
Consumer Price Index (CPI).
The
CPI is merely an estimate of how much more, percentage-wise, it will cost now
to buy the same goods you bought last year. But some economists say the CPI is
flawed because it doesn’t account for changes in consumers’ buying habits as
prices increase. They question whether you’ll do what the CPI assumes and buy
the same goods year-to-year even if prices rise.
The
chained CPI supposedly accounts for expected changes in buying habits when
prices increase. For example, you might start making chili with beans instead
of meat if ground chuck starts costing too much. This alternative approach
usually results in a number that’s at least 0.25 percent lower than the regular
CPI.
If
the government started using this method to calculate Social Security benefit
increases, it would mean those cost-of-living adjustments would be lower. That
would save the government money because Social Security checks wouldn’t
increase as much as they otherwise would. In turn, this would slow deficit
growth.
There’s
little disagreement that chained CPI would in fact do what its proponents say
it would.
The
problem with using it to calculate Social Security COLAs is that it’s tied to
the spending habits of workers.
Retirees
are apt to spend a larger portion of their income for housing and health care
than workers do. They don’t commute, for example, so they spend less on gas.
And housing and health care costs are rising much faster than other expenses.
They’re also the two areas where people have the least flexibility in
beans-for-meat type substitutions. It’s unrealistic to expect retirees or the
disabled to move every time their rent or utility bills spike. And if they need
a new hearing aid, what’s the alternative?
The
bottom line for seniors is that chained CPI is just like a pay cut that
compounds as the years go by.
The
longer you live, the less you get.
While
this method will hurt all retirees, it will hit women harder than men. The AARP
is running ads against the change to a chained CPI, featuring a variety of
women with the lines, “I am a grandmother. I am a widow. I am a woman. I am not
a line item on a budget.”
Here
are some key reasons why this accounting trick will hurt women most:
- Thanks to the gender pay gap, women already have lower average annual benefits ($13,000) than men ($17,000).
- Women live longer and will see a greater share of the cuts with every passing year. More than two out of three Social Security beneficiaries ages 85 and up are female.
- Women are less likely to have other sources of retirement income, such as pensions and savings, so Social Security is more apt to account for nearly all of their income.
- Lower payments could push more women into poverty. In 2011, Social Security kept roughly 38 percent of older women out of poverty, compared to 32 percent of older men.
Whether
the AARP and women’s advocates can prevail in this fight over who is going to
pay for the deficit hawks’ obsession is anybody’s guess. But younger people
ought to take up this cause too.
After
all, if grandma’s benefits are cut, who has to take up the slack?
Look
in the mirror.
Martha Burk is the director of the Corporate
Accountability Project for the National Council of Women's Organizations (NCWO)
and the author of the book Your Voice, Your Vote: The Savvy Woman's Guide to Power,
Politics, and the Change We Need. Follow
Martha on twitter @MarthaBurk. Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)