History of Social Security COLA Increases by Year

History of Social Security COLA Increases by Year

History of Social Security COLA Increases by Year

History of Social Security COLA Increases by Year

Beneficiaries have received cost-of-living adjustments almost every year since 1975

Every year, by law, Social Security recipients are eligible for a cost-of-living-adjustment (COLA). The increase in benefits is designed to help beneficiaries keep up with rising prices. Retired workers receive the annual COLA from the Social Security Administration (SSA), as do , those getting (SSDI) and recipients of (SSI) payments. Yet, while these beneficiaries are, indeed, eligible for COLA increases annually, the amount of the increase can vary greatly from year to year — and there's no guarantee of an increase in any given year.

COLA increases by year

Note: Since 1983 COLA changes take effect the next Jan. 1 YEAR COLA % YEAR COLA % 1975 8.0 1999 2.5 1976 6.4 2000 3.5 1977 5.9 2001 2.6 1978 6.5 2002 1.4 1979 9.9 2003 2.1 1980 14.3 2004 2.7 1981 11.2 2005 4.1 1982 7.4 2006 3.3 1983 3.5 2007 2.3 1984 3.5 2008 5.8 1985 3.1 2009 0.0 1986 1.3 2010 0.0 1987 4.2 2011 3.6 1988 4.0 2012 1.7 1989 4.7 2013 1.5 1990 5.4 2014 1.7 1991 3.7 2015 0.0 1992 3.0 2016 0.3 1993 2.6 2017 2.0 1994 2.8 2018 2.8 1995 2.6 2019 1.6 1996 2.9 2020 1.3 1997 2.1 2021 5.9 1998 1.3 2022 8.7 Source: Social Security Administration

How the Social Security COLA is calculated

SSA starts with the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W), an official measure of the monthly price change in a basket of goods and services, such as food, energy and medical care. The CPI-W is tracked by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). SSA then calculates the COLA by comparing the average of the CPI-W for July, August and September of the previous year with the average for the same three-month period in the current year. The percentage change is the COLA for the following year. For example, in 2022, the third-quarter average CPI-W was 8.7 percent higher than it was in the third quarter of 2021. As a result, benefits will in 2023. The average monthly retirement benefit will increase from $1,681 to $1,826 and the average benefit for disabled workers will go up from $1,364 to $1,483, according to the SSA. The COLA amount is typically announced in October and takes effect the following January. Get instant access to discounts, programs, services, and the information you need to benefit every area of your life. Getty Images

High inflation of 1970s led to annual COLAs

Until 1975, it took a new act of Congress each time Social Security benefits were increased. In the 1970s, however, soaring inflation was quickly eroding the purchasing power of fixed pensions and benefits. The annual rate of inflation doubled to more than 12 percent between 1969 and 1974. Congress enacted the COLA provision as part of the 1972 Social Security Amendments and automatic annual COLAs began in 1975. The first automatic Social Security COLA was 8 percent in 1975. The 1975 COLA wasn't the largest bump in Social Security history since automatic annual increases went into effect. That came in 1980, when benefits rose 14.3 percent; an 11.2 percent increase followed in 1981. The first two decades of the 21st century saw mostly modest COLAs, averaging around 2 percent per year (with no benefit increase at all for 2010, 2011 and 2016). That has changed in the last two years, with , notably for food and fuel, producing the largest COLAs since the early 1980s.

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