Military pensions,
unemployment, disability and Social Security are all targets.
By Steven Rosenfeld / AlterNet
As the House and Senate
passed its $1.012 trillion 2014 budget this month, veterans were blindsided when they
learned that Congress had cut cost-of-living increases for retiree pensions by
1 percent. A master sergeant who served 20 years could lose $80,000 in his
lifetime, said Col. Mike Barron of the Military Officers Association of
America.
The cuts will affect 1.1 million retirees, 400,000 of whom retired after 9/11, and save an estimated $6 billion. “It’s deferred compensation,” Barron said. “You are changing the rules of the game in the middle of the game. It’s very unfair. It’s a clear breach of faith with us.”
But it’s not just
military retirees who are prey to Congress’s petty thievery. In the Senate,
there are competing Democratic and Republican proposals to extend unemployment
insurance (UI) for 1.3 million longterm jobless people.
Unemployment is another earned benefit that people pay into from years of work.
The UI extension would be funded by taking money that now goes to Social
Security disability recipients, so someone could not receive both unemployment
and disability.
The GOP plan, proposed
by Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, cuts off all disability benefits—so there is no
so-called double-dipping. The Democratic plan, from Majority Leader Harry Reid,
cuts back disability payments dollar for dollar, deducting whatever amount is
received in unemployment. Eleven million Americans received disability benefits in December.
This Hunger Games
mentality of playing off groups of deserving people against each other for
earned social insurance is part of Congress’ nasty habit. The other nasty piece
is what Congress has been doing since the 1980s with Social Security
cost-of-living formulas: chipping away at yearly increases.
Going after promised
pensions, or shaving back retirement benefits, or tinkering with cost-of-living
formulas is hardly confined to Congress. It’s become a budget-balancing tactic
that shadows government employees nationwide, and has equivalents in the
private sector as workers pay more for their benefits.
In terms of magnitude,
the several billion dollars involved in the military pensions and disability
cuts pale compared to what’s at stake when tinkering with Social Security’s
inflation formula.
When President Obama
presents his 2015 federal budget next month, one of the biggest questions is
will he again propose using a stingy cost-of-living increase formula for future
Social Security payments, known as the chained CPI (consumer price index). That
tool would shave off about a third of a percent a year from annual
cost-of-living increases. Like the military pensions cuts, it adds up over
time—think of it as the magic of compounded interest in reverse.
The National Women’s Law
Center analyzed the impact of chained CPI and
found that it would result in a 6.5 percent cut in Social Security benefits
paid over 20 years, and a 9.2 percent cut over 30 years. For an 85-year-old
single woman receiving a $1,100 monthly check, NWLC estimated that would
translate to 16 weeks of “food lost."
Senate Democrats seem to
be taking different stances when different benefit cuts are on the table. On
Social Security and the chained CPI, there’s a campaign to push Obama to drop the idea
in his 2015 budget. But all the Democrats voted yes for the 2014 budget that cut
military retiree pensions. Since that vote, more than a dozen new bills
have been introduced to reverse the pension cut.
Pragmatists will say
this is the untidy way Congress works. But as progressive economist Dean
Baker has pointed out, Social Security has been pared back by more than 20
percent since the 1980s by using intentionally stingy cost-of-living formulas.
Similarly, Social Security disability benefits have also been cut back
recently, due to the federal budget sequester, making it harder for eligible
people to qualify and then to get annual increases.
“They’re always looking
to hit at vulnerable groups,” said Baker, who is co-director of the Center for
Economic and Policy Research. He said current House GOP inquiries into
disability benefit fraud are having the result of creating bad press for the program instead of
focusing on rooting out a few bad actors—which any big system serving millions
will generate.
“The big picture is we
are making cuts,” he said. “We don’t need to make these cuts.”
When senators and
congressman take the floor and start making speeches in coming days about
treating military retirees fairly, just stop and substitute public employees,
teachers and everyone else who has spent a lifetime paying into Social Security
and Medicare. And then ask yourself, what aren’t they discussing America’s
retirement security crisis this way?
Steven Rosenfeld covers
democracy issues for AlterNet and is the author of "Count My Vote: A
Citizen's Guide to Voting" (AlterNet Books, 2008).