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Social Security Benefits Keep Losing Buying Power. Here's What Lawmakers Can Do About It.

Social Security benefits lost 14% buying power in a decade because COLAs track worker, not retiree, inflation. Lawmakers should switch to the CPI-U to better cover rising healthcare costs.

Social Security Benefits Keep Losing Buying Power. Here's What Lawmakers Can Do About It.
Nasdaq News โ€” 6 July 2026
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Social Security benefits have lost nearly 14% of their buying power over the last ten years, leaving millions of retirees struggling to cover basic co

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โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

The erosion of Social Securityโ€™s purchasing power isnโ€™t just a financial statisticโ€”itโ€™s a quiet crisis reshaping retirement security for millions of Americans. When benefits fail to keep pace with the real cost of living, particularly for seniors who spend disproportionately on healthcare and housing, it forces difficult trade-offs between basic needs and economic stability. The stakes are highest for low-income retirees, who have no financial cushion to absorb rising prices, deepening inequality in Americaโ€™s aging population.

Background Context

Since 1981, Social Securityโ€™s annual cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) have been tied to the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W), a metric designed to measure the spending habits of working-age Americansโ€”not retirees. Over time, this mismatch has grown starker as healthcare costs, which consume a larger share of retiree budgets, outpace general inflation by nearly 2-to-1. The result: a structural underfunding that lawmakers have repeatedly acknowledged but rarely addressed.

What Happens Next

With inflation remaining stubbornly high in key sectors like healthcare and prescription drugs, pressure will mount on Congress to act before the next election cycle. A shift to the CPI-U, which better reflects retiree spending, could restore lost purchasing powerโ€”but would require offsetting revenue increases or benefit cuts elsewhere to avoid straining the programโ€™s long-term solvency. Meanwhile, partisan divides over how to pay for such changes may stall progress, leaving beneficiaries in limbo as costs continue to climb.

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