General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: For anyone who doesn't believe entitlements + interest on the debt will crowd out all other spending [View all]Tom Rinaldo
(23,193 posts)...that the shift he has proposed will cause senior citizen benefits to fall further behind inflationary costs than they do now. That is the corollary to this discussion. Most independent economists think that the current COLA formula is weighed in a manner that does not accurately reflect how hard inflation impacts the major areas of expenditures in senior citizen budgets relative to other age groups. Seniors are already falling behind inflation, Chained CPI increases the rate at which that happens. It sure as hell isn't "neutral" or there would be no savings realized by moving to it.
The only way Chained CPI can be sold as not cutting benefits is to argue that Seniors are more than keeping up with inflation using the current formula. Are you attempting to make that case? Do you believe that Seniors today are receiving more benefits as measured in 2003 dollars than they did in 2003? Are you asserting that the current formula inadvertently measures inflation in a way that overly compensates for inflationary pressures on retiree budgets? If not you are admitting that the Chained CPI would cause a cut in benefits as measured by constant dollars. That is where the "savings" come from.