Recent Changes to Social Security & Medicare Will Collectively Have a Significant Financial Impact in Retirement, Continue Trend of Retirees Paying More & Receiving Fewer Benefits
The new HealthView Services report, "Why Recent Updates to Medicare and Social Security Matter", details the bottom-line implications for retirees of seven changes to Medicare Means Testing, Social Security Cost of Living Adjustments (COLAs), and
"Taken on their own, each of these relatively low-profile changes to
Among the changes that have quietly passed under the radar are those to income thresholds at which Americans will be subject to Medicare surcharges. As of
Although this will impact very few retirees, a more fundamental change introduced at the same time was a delay in the implementation of indexing these brackets to inflation from 2020 to 2028. By postponing indexing for eight more years, as income grows over time more Americans will have to pay surcharges which will increase Medicare Part B and Part D premiums by an average of 36 to 203 percent. This will impact many future retirees. The paper shows a 38-year-old couple each earning
The February changes follow the lowering of Medicare surcharge brackets three to five, which took effect on
For a 40-year-old man currently earning
The report also outlines the financial implications of changes over the last three years to Social Security COLAs and the impact of the "hold harmless rule". With a zero COLA in 2015 and 0.3% increase in 2016, it notes the limited benefit to retirees from the 2% COLA increase in
Putting this in context, an average 68-year-old couple receiving their first significant
The report notes that the effective elimination of the "File & Suspend" and "File Restricted"
"Given the pressure on the Medicare and Social Security Trust Funds from increased longevity and greater numbers of retirees, we can expect on-going adjustments to these programs," added Mastrogiovanni. "Retirees should expect to see more incremental changes to reduce the value of benefits and increase costs. As this paper reveals, in combination, these small changes will have a big financial impact."
HealthView Services draws upon 70 million health care cases, actuarial, government and economic data to project retirement health care costs. The firm's rigorous bottom-up approach integrates specific variables – including health status, age, gender, income, and state of residence – that will drive future health care costs. The final calculations draw upon, and are consistent with, government health care inflation forecasts.
HealthView Services (http://www.hvsfinancial.com) is the leading provider of retirement health care cost data,
Contact:
Tel: 917-359-6969
[email protected]
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SOURCE HealthView Services



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