2022 Social Security COLA: Final Estimate Confirms it Will More Than Quadruple

The Senior Citizens League narrows down what official cost of living adjustment for next year will be to within a tenth of a percent
2022 Social Security COLA estimate
Image credit: © Jj Gouin | Dreamstime.com

Social Security recipients are likely to get an annual cost of living adjustment (COLA) of 6% or 6.1% in 2022, according to a new estimate released today by The Senior Citizens League (TSCL).

The COLA that becomes payable in January of 2022 would be the highest since 1982. In 2021 Social Security benefits increased by just 1.3%.

“Our forecast is based on CPI data through August, and there is still one more month of consumer price data to come in before we get the official announcement in October,” said Mary Johnson, Social Security policy analyst for The Senior Citizens League.

“This this year is particularly difficult to forecast with certainty. The inflation patterns caused in large part due to the COVID-19 pandemic were unprecedented in my experience. Price changes due to climate disasters throw a monkey wrench into things on top of the difficulty in watching run-up in costs earlier this year,” she added.

“Based on the new data through August, there’s a downward inflation trend,” Johnson continued. “Although my calculator indicates the COLA could be 6.1%, the chances of inflation remaining high enough for that to occur is only 10% based on 20 years of historic trends. The chances of the data dropping to 6% are twice that high, 20%. And I simply do not have any historic data to continue to support the estimate of 6.2% based on the new data. With the July and August consumer price data, inflation is plateauing,” Johnson says.

Higher gasoline and transportation prices in particular are behind the high COLA estimate for 2022, Johnson says, because those expenditures are given greater weight or importance in the consumer price index (CPI) that’s used to calculate the COLA.

“That works to the advantage of retired and disabled beneficiaries for the COLA payable in January of 2022. That has not been the case for many of the past 12 years when cheap gasoline and other falling prices dragged down the COLA,” she said.

Since 2010, COLAs have averaged just 1.4%. Inflation was so low that no COLA was payable at all in 2010, 2011, and 2016. In 2017 the COLA was almost zero, just a 0.3 percentage point.

Under current law, the Social Security COLA is determined by the percentage change in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). This index surveys the spending patterns of younger working adults under the age of 62 and doesn’t include the households of people who are retired. But older and disabled Social Security recipients allocate their budgets differently than younger working adults, spending a larger share of their income on medical and housing costs which, in many years, tend to rise faster than overall all inflation.

The COLA also doesn’t reflect cost increases in Medicare premiums and other rapidly growing Medicare costs. Research for The Senior Citizens League has found that Medicare Part B premiums are one of the fastest-growing costs in retirement. Medicare Part B premiums, which are automatically deducted from Social Security checks, often consume most, or even all, of the COLA increase.

Social Security recipients who have contacted The Senior Citizens League overwhelming feel that a higher COLA would be long overdue, saying that the COLA doesn’t come close to keeping up with their actual cost increases. When prices rise rapidly at the same time that retirees are receiving a very low COLA, as is the case in 2021, this shortfall can produce long-term impacts on retirement income and even health when retired households without adequate retirement savings run short of cash before the month is over.

“In email after email, we are hearing that people are cutting their spending on prescriptions and groceries because that’s the last things they have left to cut,” says Johnson.

With 1.2 million supporters, The Senior Citizens League works to strengthen Social Security benefits and the COLA. 

SEE ALSO:

• 2022 Social Security COLA Estimate Ticks Up Yet Again

• ‘Fair COLA for Seniors Act of 2021’ Introduced in House

• Social Security Confidence Survey Shows Retiree Doubt

Brian Anderson Editor
Editor-in-Chief at  | banderson@401kspecialist.com | + posts

Veteran financial services industry journalist Brian Anderson joined 401(k) Specialist as Managing Editor in January 2019. He has led editorial content for a variety of well-known properties including Insurance Forums, Life Insurance Selling, National Underwriter Life & Health, and Senior Market Advisor. He has always maintained a focus on providing readers with timely, useful information intended to help them build their business.

4 comments
  1. So here are 2 scenarios as to what will happen. 1)they will give a smaller increase using some lame reason and saying that everything is going just fine and justify a possible 2 or 3% increase. 2) they will give a 6% increase with and average of around $94 a month amount. Then Medicare will be increased by $70 or more a month which leaves the average SS recipient an amazing $24 a month. In the meantime inflation continues to run rampant and man SS recipients will have to cut back on food and other necessities. So you seniors that are having to eat garbage to survive will have less money in the long run and still be eating garbage.

  2. There is no question on the expected cola from s/s I pray it does happen so many seniors are in diet need of finial help with all that is going on covid 19 enconamic crisis governor crime vaccine shots just a barrel full all at once as a senior Yes and all on SS we need this to happen and happen now ASAP! Thank You Ms C W

  3. It is so hard to live on SSDI,rent , food, car Inc ,gas, propane,thangs you can’t buy on food stamps, this is just so hard,Try it for a few months only then will you understand 😭

  4. TheSS should increase should increase atby at lease 11% with no increase to Medicare premiums, With the increase in rent, gas, food, utilities, property taxes, increase in retail cost, etc. it is Impossible to live! Those of you who are highly compensated or receive huge pension should try living on these monthly benefits,

Comments are closed.

Related Posts
Total
0
Share