With Debate Framed for Chopping Safety Net, Lawmakers Denounce 'Measly' Social Security Increase

As Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump prepare to go head-to-head for a debate set to cover so-called “entitlements,” several U.S. lawmakers are denouncing what they say is a sorely insufficient increase in Social Security benefits for next year.

Described even in corporate media stories as “measly” and “tiny,” Social Security’s 2017 cost of living adjustment for the over 65 million Americans who rely on the benefits will be a 0.3 percent increase, the federal government announced Tuesday. For the average recipient, that will amount to an increase of less than $4 per month, the Associated Press notes.

The Washington Post reports, “The 0.3 percent boost is the smallest increase in history for cost-of-living adjustments, which have been in place since 1975.”

Seventy-year-old Ed Cadwell of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, said the adjustment will make people like him “fall further behind,” adding, “I barely make it from month to month as it is.”

Recipients like Cadwell saw no cost of living adjustment at all for 2016.

And this year’s boost, according to Rep. Donna Edwards (D-Md.) is “Simply NOT enough.”

Nancy Altman, founding co-director of Social Security Works, similarly criticized the increase as “woefully inadequate.”

“Seniors and Americans with disabilities are facing rising costs, particularly from prescription drugs and other medical expenses,” she said in a statement.

Altman, like Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), says the way the cost-of-living adjustment is figured, using the Consumer Price Index from the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, is flawed. Many organizations who seek to expand Social Security say the Consumer Price Index for the Elderly (CPI-E) would be a better measure.

Reacting to Tuesday’s adjustment announcement, Sanders said, “Seniors and disabled veterans need more help than a few extra dollars in their monthly checks.”

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