Alternative Inflation Measures for the Social Security Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA)

October 15, 2015 (R43363)
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Contents

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Tables

Appendixes

Summary

Monthly Social Security payments for retired workers, disabled workers, and all other beneficiaries are generally increased annually by a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA), which is based on growth in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W), a measure of inflation calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Several proposals would base the COLA on other measures of inflation produced by the BLS. Some would set the Social Security COLA equal to growth in the Chained CPI for All Urban Consumers (C-CPI-U), which is projected to reduce Social Security COLAs. Other proposals would use a measure of inflation experienced by older consumers, which is projected to increase benefits.

Proponents of using the C-CPI-U have included the 2010 National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform (chaired by former Senator Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles) and the Bipartisan Policy Center's 2010 Debt Reduction Task Force (chaired by former Senator Pete Domenici and Alice Rivlin). The President's 2014 budget (but not subsequent budgets) proposed using the C-CPI-U to compute COLAs for Social Security and in some other federal spending programs; it also proposed indexing the tax code to the C-CPI-U, which would increase federal revenues.

Proponents of basing the COLA on the C-CPI-U argue that it is a more accurate measure of changes in the cost of living because it more fully accounts for how consumers adjust their purchases as relative prices of various items change and, unlike the traditional CPI, does not have a statistical bias that increases measured inflation. Using the C-CPI-U to compute COLAs is projected to reduce overall Social Security outlays by the government, because the C-CPI-U tends to grow more slowly than does the CPI-W, which in turn would result in lower Social Security COLAs.

Other proposals would link the Social Security COLA to a measure of inflation that is based on purchasing patterns of the elderly, such as the BLS's Experimental Consumer Price Index for Americans Aged 62 and Older (CPI-E). The CPI-E grows faster than the CPI-W, on average, because a larger portion of spending by the elderly goes toward health care expenditures and other items whose prices tend to rise more rapidly. As a result, switching to such a measure is projected to result in larger COLAs and higher Social Security benefits.

This report explains how the Social Security COLA is computed under current law and explains some criticisms of using the CPI-W to compute COLAs. It discusses two alternative measures of inflation, the C-CPI-U and the CPI-E. The report then explains how using those alternative measures would affect different groups and how it would affect Social Security's finances. It concludes with a review of key recent proposals to change COLA computations and other possible changes to the COLA.


Alternative Inflation Measures for the Social Security Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA)

Social Security COLAs Under Current Law

Monthly Social Security payments for retired workers, disabled workers, and all other beneficiaries are generally increased annually by a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) that is based on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). The COLA applies beginning with the second year that a person is eligible to receive benefits. The first-year benefit is based on a formula that is linked to overall wage growth.1 Under current law, the COLA equals the percentage increase in the average CPI-W from the third quarter of the base year (the last year for which a COLA was applied) to the third quarter of the current year.2 The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) generally releases the September CPI-W by mid-October, and the Social Security Administration (SSA) then computes and announces the COLA. The COLA becomes effective in December of the current year and is payable in January of the following year. Social Security payments always reflect the benefits due for the preceding month. For example, the payment that a beneficiary received in January 2015 reflected the benefit for December 2014.

Since 1975, a COLA has been paid in every year except 2010 and 2011.3 Because the average inflation as measured by the CPI-W for the third quarter of 2015 as compared with 2014 was negative (-0.4%), the SSA has announced there will be no COLA for 2016.4 A COLA of 1.7% was payable in January 2015.5

The CPI-W and Alternative Measures of Inflation

Inflation is generally measured by computing the increase in the cost of the goods that an average person purchases. The CPI-W is an estimate of the average change in prices of the goods and services purchased by households whose income comes primarily from a clerical or wage occupation.6 In general, BLS measures the price change of each item in the "basket" of goods, and then computes overall inflation, weighting each of those price changes by the item's share of spending.

The consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U) is more broadly used than the CPI-W. BLS uses the same price data and methodology to compute the CPI-W and the CPI-U, but the CPI-U is based on the expenditures of about 87% of the population, whereas the CPI-W reflects expenditures of about 32% of the population.7 BLS introduced the CPI-U in 1978 and renamed the existing inflation measure the CPI-W. The CPI-W continues to be used for the Social Security COLA even though it measures the inflation facing a population—urban wage earners and clerical workers—that by definition are employed, unlike most Social Security beneficiaries.8 However, the two measures tend to track each other closely.

Criticisms of Basing the Social Security COLA on the CPI-W

General Criticisms

Some shortcomings of the CPI are inherent in any price measure. For example, the CPI is based on an average of all consumption in the nation, whereas actual purchases and prices paid vary by individual. Therefore, virtually everyone will experience inflation that is either higher or lower than the measured rate.

Other shortcomings are technical and can be addressed by changes in methodology. In recent years, BLS has adjusted its processes to reduce an upward bias in the CPI.9 For example, they have improved the adjustments they make to the index to account for the introduction of new products and changes in the quality of existing products.

They have also incorporated procedures that partially account for the "substitution effect"—the fact that consumers cushion themselves from the effect of relative price increases by adjusting their purchasing patterns, and they take advantage of relative price decreases. For example, if the price of apples grows much faster than the price of pears, people often buy more pears. Conversely, if apples go on sale and pears do not, sales of apples would increase. A price increase still reduces consumers' standards of living, but the reduction is smaller than it would be if they were forced to buy the same items every month.

The CPI-W Overstates Overall Inflation

BLS has identified two factors that cause the CPI-W (and the CPI-U, which uses the same methodology) to overstate inflation.10 First, the CPI-W does not fully account for substitution. The BLS calculates price indexes for 211 categories of goods in 87 geographic areas. The CPI-W adjusts for the effects of substitution within those "item-area" categories, but not between them. Second, a "small-sample" bias arises because BLS can collect only a sample of the numerous prices in the economy. This bias is separate from the uncertainty that arises whenever an estimate is based on a limited sample; the small-sample bias causes inflation to be systematically overstated.

The CPI-W May Understate Inflation Experienced by Older People

In contrast, some analysts point out that the CPI-W may understate the average inflation experienced by Social Security beneficiaries because older Americans consume a greater than average share of goods whose prices tend to rise more rapidly than average, most importantly health care and housing. The CPI-W tracks the spending habits of urban wage and clerical workers, but about 80% of Social Security beneficiaries are aged 62 or older11 and therefore tend to have different spending patterns. Persons aged 62 and older spend around twice as much of their direct outlays on health care as does the rest of the population, a difference that accounts for about half of the difference in the growth rates of the CPI-W and the Experimental Consumer Price Index for Americans Aged 62 and Older (CPI-E), a price index for the elderly.12 Older Americans also spend more than average on other goods whose prices usually rise faster than average, such as housing.13

The Chained CPI-U

In August 2002, BLS introduced a supplemental index, the Chained CPI for All Urban Consumers (C-CPI-U). Although the series was first published in 2002, BLS has produced monthly values for the index beginning in December 1999.

Unlike the CPI-W (and the traditional CPI-U), the C-CPI-U fully accounts for substitution by consumers and effectively eliminates small-sample bias.14 The weights used for the traditional versions of the CPI are updated every two years to reflect changes in spending patterns. It therefore does not fully incorporate the monthly effects of changing prices on spending patterns. In contrast, when BLS estimates the C-CPI-U, it estimates weights for each month separately, thus "chaining" the two months.15

The C-CPI-U tends to increase at a slower rate than the CPI-W. The Social Security Administration's Office of the Chief Actuary estimates that the C-CPI-U will grow an average of 0.3 percentage points more slowly than the CPI-W, which is equal to the average differential since 1999. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates that the differential will average 0.25 percentage points, slightly lower than the historical average, because it excludes some data from the early 2000s, before BLS made some methodological changes.

Revisions to the C-CPI-U Would Complicate COLA Computations

Because data on actual spending patterns are collected every two years, the initial release of the C-CPI-U—which occurs several weeks after the end of the month for which inflation is being measured—is based on estimated spending patterns. Interim estimates are released in February of the next year. The final release, which is based entirely on actual spending data, is released the following February, as much as two years after price data are collected.16

The lag between the initial and final releases of the C-CPI-U would complicate COLA calculations. SSA announces next year's COLA in mid-October, soon after BLS releases the current year's September CPI-W figure, as described above. To address the issue of the long time lag between initial and final releases of the C-CPI-U for a given month, some have proposed basing the Social Security COLA on the initial release of the C-CPI-U (the initial C-CPI-U is published at the same time as the CPI-U and the CPI-W, i.e., just a few weeks after the end of the month for which price changes are being measured). The difference between the initial and final releases could be reflected in COLAs for subsequent years.17

Would a C-CPI-U Overstate Older Americans' Ability to Substitute Among Consumer Items?

Some argue that the low-income elderly have less ability than the average consumer to change what they buy when prices change because they spend most of their income on essential items, such as housing, food, health care, and utilities.18 These essential items are not good substitutes for each other. For example, if the price of electricity rises, some low-income elderly might not be in a position to reduce electricity purchases, particularly if they are already purchasing little electricity.

If it is true that some low-income elderly have less ability to substitute among items in response to relative price changes than other consumers, then the C-CPI-U would not capture the full impact of relative price changes on the low-income elderly. That is, the C-CPI-U would underestimate the impact of inflation facing the low-income elderly. However, there is little research on this question.19

The Experimental CPI for the Elderly

In response to concerns about how effectively the CPI-W tracks the spending patterns of older consumers, in 1987 Congress directed BLS to introduce an index for the elderly.20 BLS developed the CPI-E and constructed values for the series for 1982 and later.21 However, a fully developed price index for the elderly might differ from the CPI-E, which is computed using price data from the same geographic areas and retail outlets as the CPI-W and CPI-U; only the consumption weights differ. BLS commissioner Erica Groshen testified, "We recognize that elderly households live in different places, shop at different retail outlets, buy a different mix of products, and even in many cases qualify for different prices than other urban consumers."22

The experimental CPI-E index also may not be appropriate for Social Security COLAs because the over-62 population differs from the population of Social Security beneficiaries. Many Social Security beneficiaries are under the age of 62, such as surviving children and most disabled workers. And some people over 62 are not Social Security beneficiaries, such as the substantial portion of persons aged 62 to 64 who have not yet claimed benefits.

On average, the CPI-E has increased by an average of about 0.2 percentage points faster than the CPI-W or CPI-U since 1982. SSA's Office of the Chief Actuary expects the differential to remain at that level.

Several bills to set Social Security COLAs equal to growth in a CPI for the elderly have been introduced in the 114th Congress, such as H.R. 1391, H.R. 1811, H.R. 1984, H.R. 3351, H.R. 3588, S. 731, S. 960, S. 1904, S. 1940.

Effects of Changes to the Social Security COLA: Policy Considerations

This section discusses issues that may inform the debate about whether to base the Social Security COLA on either the C-CPI-U or the CPI-E instead of the CPI-W. It first discusses how the cumulative impact of such a change would grow as individuals aged and how Social Security becomes an increasingly important source of income for older beneficiaries. It then discusses the projected impact on Social Security's overall finances of a change in the COLA.

Effect of Changes on Different Groups of Beneficiaries

The effect of higher or lower COLAs would be cumulative; that is, the impact on benefits would grow with each additional year of benefit receipt. Benefits for people who had just become entitled, such as 62-year-old retired workers or newly disabled workers, would be unaffected, because first-year benefits are not affected by COLAs. The changes would always be small for people who had only been entitled to benefits for a few years, and they would be small for all beneficiaries in the first few years after a policy change, because those groups would have been subjected to the higher or lower COLAs for only a short time. The changes would be largest for people who received COLAs under the new policy for many years, such as the very old or people who had been disabled for a long period.

For example, if the COLA was based on the C-CPI-U and it grew 0.3 percentage points more slowly than the CPI-W, as projected by the SSA,23 then the benefits of 65-year-olds—who will have experienced three years of COLAs—would be reduced by 0.9% (see Figure 1).24 The reduction would increase as the worker aged: to 3.7% at age 75 and 6.5% at 85.25 That is, beginning 23 years after the policy was changed, scheduled monthly benefit payments for 85-year-old beneficiaries would be 6.5% lower than they would be under current law.

And if, for example, the CPI-E or a similar measure were used to compute the COLA and it grew 0.2 percentage points faster than the CPI-W, as projected by the SSA,26 then benefits would be 0.6% higher for retirees at age 65, 2.6% higher at 75, and 4.6% higher at 85.

Although the cumulative effect of a change in the COLA is largest for people who have been subject to the change for many years, the number of people affected declines with age as people die. For example, only about half of 62-year-olds live to age 84 (see Figure 1).

Figure 1. Projected Percentage Change in Retirement Benefits from Basing COLA on a Different Measure of Inflation, by Age

Source: Congressional Research Service, based on Social Security Administration (SSA) Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W), Chained CPI for All Urban Consumers (C CPI-U), and Experimental Consumer Price Index Index for Americans Aged 62 and Older (CPI-E) assumptions; and National Vital Statistics Reports, National, United States Life Tables, 2010, DHHS/CDC/NCHS, vol. 63, no. 7, November 6, 2014, at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr63/nvsr63_07.pdf.

Notes: Projections are based on SSA assumptions that the C CPI-U would grow 0.3 percentage points slower than the CPI-W and CPI-E would grow 0.2 percentage points faster than the CPI-W.

Because benefit changes cumulate, the effect of a change in COLAs on lifetime benefits would depend on how long a retiree lives. On average, people who had higher earnings over their lifetime live longer, so they would be most affected.27

However, older beneficiaries tend to have lower current income and to depend more on their Social Security benefits than younger groups. At advanced ages, most beneficiaries are no longer able to work, and many beneficiaries who had savings at retirement have depleted those savings. For the minority of the elderly with defined benefit pensions, the purchasing power of those payments generally declines over time because it is not usually indexed to inflation.28 As a result, poverty rates increase with age. Among beneficiaries aged 65 to 69, 5.7% were poor in 2012; the poverty rate for those 80 or older was 9.2%.29

Figure 2. Social Security Benefits as a Proportion of Beneficiary Units' Total Income, by Age, 2012

Older Beneficiaries are More Dependent on Social Security

Source: SSA, Income of the Population 55 or Older, 2012, Washington, DC, April 2014, Table 9.A1, at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/income_pop55/.

Notes: Beneficiary units are defined as married couples living together (at least one of whom is aged 65 or older) and non-married persons aged 65 and older. Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.

As shown in Figure 2, older beneficiaries depend more on their Social Security benefits than do younger ones. For example, for more than half of those aged 80 and older (54%), Social Security benefits are at least 80% of total income. In contrast, for only 29% of the 65-69 age group do Social Security benefits represent at least 80% of total income.

Changing how the COLA is computed is one of the few recent Social Security proposals that would affect current beneficiaries. Many options to reduce Social Security benefits would change the way benefits are calculated for new beneficiaries, and many proposals would reduce benefits only for people currently aged 55 or younger.

Effect of Changes on Social Security's Financial Status

One measure of Social Security's long-term financial status is the system's annual income and cost rates. Under current law, the Social Security cost rate—spending as a share of taxable payroll—is projected to grow from about 14% today to around 17% in 2035 and later. (Taxable payroll is all earnings subject to the Social Security payroll tax.) The income rate, which is all tax revenue as a share of taxable payroll—is projected to remain around its current level of 13%.

Figure 3. Projected Financial Effects of Changing the Social Security COLA

Source: SSA, Office of the Chief Actuary, "Provisions Affecting Cost of Living Adjustment," at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/solvency/provisions/cola.html.

Notes: Projections assume COLAs are changed beginning with benefits paid in 2016. Dashed lines show the cost rate if the Social Security COLA were computed based on the C CPI-U, assuming it would grow 0.3 percentage points slower than the CPI-W, and the cost rate if the COLA were computed based on the CPI-E, assuming it would grow 0.2 percentage points faster than the CPI-W.

If the COLA were based on the C-CPI-U beginning in 2016, the Social Security actuary projects that future Social Security benefits that are based on current law would ultimately decline by about 4%, or 0.7% of taxable payroll (see Figure 3). Switching to the CPI-E would ultimately increase spending by about 3%, or 0.5% of taxable payroll.

Table 1. Projected Effect of Changing the COLA on Social Security's 75-Year Financial Balance

 

Expected Average Annual Change in COLA

Current-Law 75-Year Deficit
(% of Taxable Payroll)

75-Year Deficit
Under Proposal

(% of Taxable Payroll)

Projected Change in 75-Year Deficit

(% of Taxable Payroll)

COLA based on C-CPI-U

-0.3 percentage points

2.88%

2.32%

-0.56%

COLA based on CPI-E

+0.2 percentage points

 

3.26%

+0.38%

Source: Office of the Chief Actuary, Social Security Administration, Individual Changes Modifying Social Security, Options A3 ("Starting December 2015, compute the COLA using a chained version of the Consumer Price Index for Wage and Salary Workers [CPI-W].") and A6 ("Starting December 2016, compute the COLA using the Consumer Price Index for the Elderly [CPI-E]"), September 19, 2014, at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/solvency/provisions/cola.html. The 75-year deficit is a measure of the Social Security system's imbalance; it equals the present value of outlays less the present value of revenues over the next 75 years.

A second measure of Social Security's long-term financial status is the system's summarized income and cost rates.30 The Social Security trustees project the 75-year summarized cost rate to be 16.77% of taxable payroll and the summarized income rate to be 13.89%, resulting in a deficit of 2.88%. Basing the COLA on the C-CPI-U beginning in 2015 would reduce the deficit by 0.56% of taxable payroll, according to the Social Security actuaries (see Table 1). Using the CPI-E beginning in 2016 would increase the deficit by 0.38%, according to the Social Security actuaries.

Setting the COLA equal to the C-CPI-U for benefits paid in 2016 and later would reduce spending by $116 billion from FY2016 through FY2024, according to CBO.31 (CBO assumes that the C-CPI-U will grow 0.25 percentage points slower than the CPI-W.) Budget estimates for using the CPI-E are not available, but under the assumption that the CPI-E will grow 0.2 percentage points faster than the CPI-W, basing the COLA on it would increase Social Security outlays by about $93 billion over the same period ($116 billion x (0.2/0.25)=$93 billion).

Proposals to Base the Social Security COLA on the C-CPI-U and Partially Offset the Resulting Benefit Reductions

The President's 2014 budget proposed basing the Social Security COLA on the C-CPI-U, but it would also shelter older beneficiaries from the full effect of that change.32 That proposal was not included in either of the two subsequent proposed budgets. In 2010, similar proposals were made by the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform (chaired by former Senator Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles, hereinafter the "Fiscal Commission")33 and the Bipartisan Policy Center (chaired by former Senator Pete Domenici and Alice Rivlin).34

Offsets Proposed in the President's 2014 Budget

The President's 2014 Budget proposal included a separate provision that would in isolation increase benefits for older beneficiaries. The increase would begin at the age of 76 for retired workers and in the 15th year of benefit eligibility for disabled workers. The increase would be phased in over 10 years, so it would increase benefits for 85-year-olds by 5% of the average retiree benefit. Because everyone would have the same increase, benefits would increase by more than 5% for people with lower benefits and by less for those with higher benefits. A second benefit increase would apply beginning at the age of 95, although that would affect relatively few people; less than 10% of people aged 62 live until 95. On net, people with the lowest benefits would experience a slight increase in benefits at some ages, because that provision would more than offset the expected effects of the lower COLA.35

Offsets in Other Proposals

The Fiscal Commission proposed a similar measure; their "20-year benefit bump up" would increase benefits by 5% of the national average benefit for persons who have been eligible for benefits for 20 years (eligibility is defined as a determination of disability, or the earliest eligibility age for retirement benefits, which would rise gradually from the age of 62 to 64 under the commission's proposal). The enhancement would be phased in over the five years from the 20th through 24th years after eligibility, in increments of 1% per year. The total 5% increase would continue to apply in all subsequent years of benefit receipt. Both the Fiscal Commission and the Bipartisan Policy Center also include measures that would increase initial benefits for people with lower lifetime earnings.

Other Options for COLA Changes

COLAs need not be linked directly to any measure of inflation. Another option would be to have COLAs be greater than inflation, for example by linking them to wage growth, which is on average higher than price inflation.36 Currently, initial retirement benefits, which workers can claim beginning at age 62, are linked to wage growth through the age of 60. Because COLAs are linked to prices, retirees do not share in any of the increase in the purchasing power of wages that occurs after they are 60 years old. In isolation, such a change would increase Social Security spending, which would ultimately have to be offset either by an increase in taxes or a reduction in initial benefits.

Under current law, all beneficiaries receive the same COLA (i.e., the percentage increase), but some proposals would means-test COLAs. People with more income or higher benefit levels would receive a lower COLA than people with lower income or benefits.37

Other Federal Provisions Affected by the Social Security COLA Computation

Other Social Security Provisions Affected by the Social Security COLA Computation

The Social Security COLA affects other provisions of the Social Security program. By law, if there is no change over the relevant measuring period in the CPI-W, and consequently no COLA, there can be no change in the following program parameters:

These program elements are adjusted annually based on the increase in the national average wage index only if there is a COLA. As a result, these program elements remained at their 2009 levels in 2010 and 2011, but they were adjusted upwards in subsequent years, when COLAs were paid. Likewise, these program elements will remain at their 2015 levels in January 2016.40

Other Programs Affected by the Social Security COLA Computation

Beneficiaries of other programs are also affected by the absence of a Social Security COLA, including low-income elderly and disabled persons, veterans, and federal civil service annuitants. As a result, beneficiaries of the programs listed below did not receive COLAs in January 2010 and January 2011 and will not receive a COLA in 2016.

The Social Security COLA triggers an increase in benefits paid under

The absence of a COLA increase may impact certain Medicare Part B enrollees. Most Medicare Part B enrollees have their Part B premiums withheld from their monthly Social Security benefits. For these individuals, a hold-harmless provision in the Social Security Act (§1839(f)) ensures that their benefits will not decrease as a result of an increase in the Part B premium.  In most years, the hold-harmless provision has little impact; however, in a year in which there is a 0% Social Security COLA and a Part B premium increase, such as happened in 2010 and 2011, the hold-harmless provision may apply to a much larger number of people. As a result of a 0% Social Security COLA in 2016, an estimated 70% of Medicare beneficiaries would be protected by this provision in the event of an increase in the Part B premium, and their 2016 premiums would be the same as in 2015.44 However, about 30% of beneficiaries are not protected by this provision. This includes higher-income enrollees, new Medicare Part B enrollees, individuals who do not receive Social Security benefits, and low-income enrollees whose premiums are paid by Medicaid.  To ensure that the Part B program has sufficient income from premiums and general revenue contributions, the premiums paid by those not held harmless may be significantly higher than if the hold harmless provision were not in effect.

COLAs under the following programs are not triggered by the Social Security COLA, but they use the same measurement period and formula for computing COLAs as the Social Security program:

The Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) uses the same measurement period for computing its COLA as the Social Security program, although a modified formula is used to limit the COLA.47

Benefits paid to disabled veterans and to survivors of certain service members and veterans under the following programs are not automatically indexed for inflation. However, Congress enacts legislation each year to provide a COLA equal to the Social Security COLA for

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Income Security ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Acknowledgments

This report has had several authors. It was originally written by former CRS Analyst [author name scrubbed]. It was substantially altered and updated by former CRS Analyst Noah Meyerson.

Footnotes

1.

For details, see CRS Report R43542, How Social Security Benefits Are Computed: In Brief, by [author name scrubbed].

2.

Automatic COLAs began in 1975; see §215(i) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. §415[i]). For additional discussion, see CRS Report 94-803, Social Security: Cost-of-Living Adjustments, by [author name scrubbed].

3.

If there is a decrease in the CPI-W over the measurement period (if there is a decline in prices), Social Security benefits are not reduced. Stated another way, if the change in the CPI-W over the measurement period does not result in a COLA, benefits remain flat, as occurred in 2010 and 2011.

4.

Social Security Administration, "2016 Social Security Changes," press release, October 15, 2015, http://www.ssa.gov/news/press/factsheets/colafacts2016.html.

5.

See CRS Report 94-803, Social Security: Cost-of-Living Adjustments, by [author name scrubbed]. Elements of many other federal entitlement programs are indexed to inflation; see CRS Report R42000, Inflation-Indexing Elements in Federal Entitlement Programs, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].

6.

For an overview of the CPI, see Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Consumer Price Index: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)," July 24, 2015, at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpifaq.htm; and Clark Burdick and Lynn Fisher, "Social Security Cost-of-Living Adjustments and the Consumer Price Index," Social Security Bulletin, vol. 67, no. 3 (2007), at http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v67n3/v67n3p73.html.

7.

The CPI-W is a subset of the CPI-U: the CPI-W represents expenditures by urban households that derive more than one-half of their income from clerical or hourly wage occupations. See Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Consumer Price Index: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ): Whose buying habits does the CPI reflect?," at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpifaq.htm#Question_3.

8.

Most households with Social Security income receive no income from current work; see Social Security Administration, Income of the Population 55 or Older, 2012, Washington, DC, April 2014, Table 2A.2, at http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/income_pop55/2012/sect02.html#table2.a2.

9.

David S. Johnson, Stephen B. Reed, and Kenneth J. Stewart, "Price measurement in the United States: a decade after the Boskin Report," Monthly Labor Review, May 2006, pp. 10-19, at http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2006/05/art2full.pdf.

10.

See Congressional Budget Office, "Using the Chained CPI to Index Social Security, Other Federal Programs, and the Tax Code for Inflation," Testimony of Jeffrey Kling before the Subcommittee on Social Security, Committee on Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives, April 18, 2013, pp. 2-4, at http://www.cbo.gov/publication/44083; and Statement of Erica L. Groshen, commissioner, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, before the Subcommittee on Social Security, Committee on Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives, April 18, 2013.

11.

CRS calculations based on data from the Social Security Administration, Annual Statistical Supplement, 2014, tables 5.A1 and 5.A10 at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/supplement/2014/5a.html#table5.a1.2.

12.

The weight on medical care in the CPI-E is 11.4%, compared with 7.6% in the CPI-U and 6.2% in the CPI-W. See Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Table 1 (2011-2012 Weights). Relative importance of components in the Consumer Price Indexes: U.S. city average, December 2013," at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpiri_2013.pdf, and "Table 1 (2011-2012 Weights). Relative importance of components in the Experimental Consumer Price Index for Americans 62 Years of Age and Older: U.S. city average, December 2013." That spending excludes health benefits paid by employers or federal government programs.

13.

See Congressional Budget Office, "Using The Chained CPI to Index Social Security, Other Federal Programs, and the Tax Code for Inflation," Testimony of Jeffrey Kling before the Subcommittee on Social Security, Committee on Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives, April 18, 2013, pp. 12-13, at http://www.cbo.gov/publication/44083.

14.

For more information on the C-CPI-U, see CRS Report RL32293, The Chained Consumer Price Index: What Is It and Would It Be Appropriate for Cost-of-Living Adjustments?, by [author name scrubbed].

15.

Bureau of Labor Statistics, Frequently Asked Questions About the Chained Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (C-CPI-U), at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpisupqa.htm. See also Robert Cage, John Greenlees, and Patrick Jackman, Introducing the Chained Consumer Price Index, May 2003, at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/super_paris.pdf.

16.

See CRS Report RL32293, The Chained Consumer Price Index: What Is It and Would It Be Appropriate for Cost-of-Living Adjustments?, by [author name scrubbed].

17.

Congressional Budget Office, Using a Different Measure of Inflation for Indexing Federal Programs and the Tax Code, Economic and Budget Issue Brief, Washington, DC, February 24, 2010, at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/112xx/doc11256/CPI_brief.pdf. See also Congressional Budget Office, Technical Appendix: Indexing with the Chained CPI-U for Tax Provisions and Federal Programs, February 24, 2010, at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/112xx/doc11256/WebAppendix.pdf.

18.

Economic Policy Institute, "Economist and Social Insurance Expert Statement on Social Security COLA: No Empirical Basis for Reducing the Social Security COLA," November 20, 2012, at http://s2.epi.org/files/2012/EPI_COLA_Letter.pdf.

19.

Alicia H. Munnell and William H. Hisey, Implications of a "Chained" CPI, Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, Number 11-12, Boston, MA, September 2011, at http://crr.bc.edu/images/stories/Briefs/IB_11-12_508.pdf. For recent research on the impact of inflation using the experimental supplemental poverty measure see http://www.bls.gov/pir/spmhome.htm.

20.

P.L. 110-175, §191.

21.

For a description of the experimental CPI-E and some of its limitations, see Bureau of Labor Statistics, Experimental Consumer Price Index for Americans 62 Years of Age and Older, 1998-2009, Washington, DC, at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/cpieart2009.pdf. See also CRS Report RS20060, A Separate Consumer Price Index for the Elderly?, by [author name scrubbed].

22.

Statement of Erica L. Groshen, commissioner, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, before the Subcommittee on Social Security, Committee on Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives, April 18, 2013, p. 7.

23.

Social Security Administration, Office of the Chief Actuary, "Provisions Affecting Cost of Living Adjustment," Provisions, Provision A3, at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/solvency/provisions/cola.html.

24.

These effects would occur even for beneficiaries who claimed benefits later than age 62, because COLAs apply even in years before a beneficiary begins to receive benefits.

25.

These calculations assume CPI-W growth of 2.7%, the long-term assumption of the Social Security Trustees.

26.

Social Security Administration, Office of the Chief Actuary, "Provisions Affecting Cost of Living Adjustment," Provisions, Provision A6, at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/solvency/provisions/cola.html.

27.

See, e.g., Hilary Waldon, "Mortality Differentials by Lifetime Earnings Decile: Implications for Evaluations of Proposed Social Security Law Changes, Social Security Bulletin, vol. 73, no. 1 (released February 2013), at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v73n1/v73n1p1.html.

28.

Employee Benefit Research Institute, "Pension Income of the Elderly and Characteristics of Their Former Employers," EBRI Notes, vol. 28, no. 3 (March 2007), p. 1, at http://www.ebri.org/pdf/notespdf/EBRI_Notes_03-20071.pdf.

29.

Social Security Administration, Income of the Population 55 or Older, 2012, Washington, DC, April 2014, Table 11.2, at http://www.socialsecurity.gov/policy/docs/statcomps/income_pop55/.

30.

The summarized cost rate equals the projected ratio of the present value of outlays to the present value of taxable payroll; the summarized income rate equals the projected ratio of the present value of revenues plus the current trust-fund balance to the present value of taxable payroll.

31.

Congressional Budget Office, Options for Reducing the Deficit: 2015 to 2024, November 2014, p. 16, at https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/49638-BudgetOptions.pdf.

32.

See Fiscal Year 2014 Budget of the U.S. Government, p. 46, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2014/assets/budget.pdf, and Office of Management and Budget, "Chained CPI Protections," at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/factsheet/chained-cpi-protections.

33.

The National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, The Moment of Truth, Washington, DC, December 2010, at http://www.fiscalcommission.gov/sites/fiscalcommission.gov/files/documents/TheMomentofTruth12_1_2010.pdf. See also Stephen C. Goss, Chief Actuary, Social Security Administration, Estimates of the OASDI Financial Effects of the Plan Developed by National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, December 1, 2010, at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/solvency/index.html.

34.

Bipartisan Policy Center, Restoring America's Future, Washington, DC, November 2010, at http://www.bipartisanpolicy.org/projects/debt-initiative/about. See also Stephen C. Goss, Chief Actuary, Social Security Administration, Estimates of the OASDI Financial Effects of Restoring America's Future - a Plan Developed by the Bipartisan Policy Center's Debt Reduction Task Force, November 17, 2010, at http://www.ssa.gov/OACT/solvency/index.html.

35.

See Figure 1 of Paul N. Van de Water and Kathy Ruffing, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, "Chained CPI Proposal Would Cut Social Security Retirement Benefits by About 2 Percent, on Average," April 23, 2013, at http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=3957. The President's proposal would also use the C-CPI-U to index other non-means-tested benefit programs and parameters of the tax code.

36.

See C. Eugene Steuerle and Jon Bakija, "Retooling Social Security for the 21st Century," Social Security Bulletin, vol. 60, no. 2 (April 1997), p. 56, at http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ssb/v60n2/v60n2p37.pdf. Workers' compensation benefits under the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act are currently indexed to wage growth; see CRS Report R41506, The Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act (LHWCA): Overview of Workers' Compensation for Certain Private-Sector Maritime Workers, by [author name scrubbed].

37.

See Andrew Biggs, "Means Testing and Its Limits," National Affairs, no.9 (fall 2011), p. 111, at http://www.nationalaffairs.com/doclib/20110919_Biggs.pdf.

38.

For more information on the retirement earnings test, see CRS Report R41242, Social Security Retirement Earnings Test: How Earnings Affect Benefits, by [author name scrubbed].

39.

An individual who receives Social Security disability benefits may not have earnings above a certain amount, known as the Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) amount.

40.

By law, other program elements are adjusted annually based on the increase in the national average wage index whether or not a COLA is payable (such as the SGA amount for non-blind individuals who receive Social Security disability benefits). For more information, see the SSA fact sheet at http://www.ssa.gov/pressoffice/factsheets/colafacts2014.pdf.

41.

For more information, see CRS Report 94-486, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), by [author name scrubbed].

42.

For more information, see CRS Report RS22804, Veterans' Benefits: Pension Benefit Programs, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

43.

For more information, see CRS Report RS22350, Railroad Retirement Board: Retirement, Survivor, Disability, Unemployment, and Sickness Benefits, by [author name scrubbed].

44.

CRS Report R44224, Potential Impact of No Social Security COLA on Medicare Part B Premiums in 2016, by [author name scrubbed]

45.

For more information on COLAs under CSRS, see CRS Report 94-834, Cost-of-Living Adjustments for Federal Civil Service Annuities, by [author name scrubbed].

46.

For more information, see CRS Report RL34751, Military Retirement: Background and Recent Developments, by [author name scrubbed].

47.

In addition, non-disabled retirees under the age of 62 who are covered by FERS do not receive COLAs. For more information on COLAs under FERS, see CRS Report 94-834, Cost-of-Living Adjustments for Federal Civil Service Annuities, by [author name scrubbed].

48.

For more information, see CRS Report RL34626, Veterans' Benefits: Disabled Veterans, by [author name scrubbed] et al.

49.

For more information, see CRS Report R40757, Veterans' Benefits: Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) for Survivors, by [author name scrubbed].