Updated
Updated · The Senior Citizens League · Jul 14
Congress Reintroduces Social Security 2100 Act as 2027 COLA Projection Holds at 3.8%
Updated
Updated · The Senior Citizens League · Jul 14

Congress Reintroduces Social Security 2100 Act as 2027 COLA Projection Holds at 3.8%

3 articles · Updated · The Senior Citizens League · Jul 14

Summary

  • Congress has reintroduced the Social Security 2100 Act, a broad overhaul that would raise benefits 2%, lift the minimum benefit to 125% of the federal poverty line and switch COLA calculations to the CPI-E.
  • TSCL kept its 2027 Social Security COLA forecast at 3.8%, up from this year’s 2.8%; if applied now, average monthly benefits would rise $73.62 to $2,011.15 from $1,937.53.
  • The bill would fund the changes by increasing the payroll tax and applying it to income above $400,000, a move TSCL says would extend the trust fund’s life by 32 years.
  • Passage still looks remote: GovTrack assigns the 2026 bill a 0% chance, even as the 2026 trustees report projects trust fund insolvency in Q4 2032 and automatic benefit cuts without congressional action.
  • TSCL argues the measure would help seniors hit hardest by inflation and poverty, though it says the bill lacks immediate relief such as a one-time $1,400 payment or a temporary $200 monthly boost.

Insights

With insolvency looming and major reforms stalled, how can Americans personally bridge the projected $440 monthly benefit gap?
If the 'gold standard' reform bill cannot pass, what realistic compromises could actually save Social Security before 2032?
Is Social Security shifting from a primary retirement pillar to merely a basic safety net for future generations?