3.2% Social Security COLA may leave some retirees short

The Social Security cost-of-living adjustment will be 3.2% in 2024, down from the massive boost of 8.75% implemented this year.

The increase, which the Social Security Administration announced Thursday morning, is higher than the average of 2.6% seen over the past 20 years. But the decline in the COLA from 2023’s is a sign of cooling inflation.

The rise amounts to an average increase of $50 a month for the 66 million people who receive Social Security, as well as the 7.5 million who get Supplemental Security Income, the administration said.

Social Security taxes are also affected by the change, with the maximum earnings that are taxable going from the current level of $160,200 to $168,600.

“The 3.2% increase in the Social Security COLA for 2024 is a sign of normalcy and that inflation is getting under control. These are hopeful signs for everyone,” Larry Luxenberg, principal of Lexington Avenue Capital Management, said in an email. “This increase is only slightly above the Social Security Administration’s long-term projection. Prior increases for the last few years were unsustainable.”

The forthcoming COLA is necessary to help Social Security participants keep up with the rising costs of essentials — but it also comes as more recipients are being taxed on their payments for the first time, according to data from The Senior Citizens League. That’s because the income threshold for taxation on Social Security hasn’t changed since those payments began being taxed — in 1984.

More than a quarter of recipients who have received Social Security for more than three years said that 2023 was the first time they’ve had to pay taxes on some of those benefits, reflecting the 2022 tax year, according to a survey by The Senior Citizens League. That figure will almost certainly go up next year, given the 8.7% increase for the 2023 tax year.

The decrease in the size of the annual COLA follows a decrease in core inflation, but that doesn’t necessarily reflect the financial realities for people living on Social Security, Jim Sumpter, president of CMC Financial, said in an email.

“While it is nice that there will be an increase, it could be less than what clients are actually spending money on. Many items still cost much more than the overall increase which could be a net deficit to many seniors,” Sumpter said. “For example, out-of-pocket medical expenses seem to be a large bill for many seniors, and overall inflation on many of those costs is much greater than the 3.2% SSA increase. These clients could likely see a net deficit.”

A report earlier this year from The Senior Citizens League found that 68% of people on Social Security said that household expenses have been 10% higher than a year prior, even as inflation has slowed. More than half of people the group surveyed said they were worried that Social Security payments would be insufficient in the future to cover their costs of living.

Along with that, the recent COLA increases have had the adverse effect of pulling some recipients over the income line that determines whether they qualify for low-income assistance programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps.

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