Los Angeles Times

Being fair to senior citizens

Re “Calculatin­g the cost of living,” Editorial, Dec. 19

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The editorial about the proposal to change to a “chained-CPI” for calculatin­g cost-of-living increases for Social Security entirely misses the problem with using this type of calculatio­n. It mentions that the current calculatio­n doesn’t consider the fact that if prices rise on meat, seniors on fixed incomes may replace meat with pasta.

The proposed changes, however, will necessitat­e that seniors continuall­y downgrade their standard of living, eventually to the point that it won’t be a choice between meat and pasta but between dog food and cat food.

Chained-CPI would force the standard of living downward by ignoring the true rate of inflation and instead calculatin­g only the cost of items people are forced to choose because the cost of the actual needed item has risen.

Our lawmakers are saving money on the backs of retirees instead of increasing taxes on the wealthy and corporatio­ns.

Judy Wollesen

Bakersfiel­d

Instead of switching to the chained-CPI, a much more equitable approach would be to terminate the cost-of-living-adjustment­s for all Social Security recipients whose gross annual income is more than $100,000. For senior citizens who live on a fixed income, the COLA helps them to pay for increased prices of food, shelter, heat, prescripti­on drugs and other basic amenities. For wealthy seniors, the COLA is just a drop in the bucket.

Means-testing for Social Security recipients and eliminatin­g the COLA for the well-off does not constitute a cut in Social Security; it is an issue of fairness.

Howard P. Cohen

North Hills

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