Content starts here
CLOSE ×

Search

AARP AARP States Colorado Advocacy

Social Security, Medicare Cuts Could Increase Poverty

51613 nonpromoted Medicare Facebook Keep Your Promise

A new analysis shows Social Security and Medicare cuts could increase poverty among older Coloradans as the supplemental poverty measure finds more seniors are struggling in Colorado.

A new analysis of Census data showing that more Coloradans are living in poverty shines a spotlight on harmful cuts to Social Security and Medicare now being considered in Washington that could push even more seniors into poverty.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation analysis, 15 percent of people 65 and older in Colorado have incomes below the supplemental poverty line. This compares to 7 percent of older Coloradans living in poverty under the official Federal poverty threshold.

“Some politicians in Washington talk about Medicare and Social Security as if they’re just numbers in a budget,” said Angela Cortez, AARP Colorado Spokesperson. “The reality is seniors depend on these vital programs and what these numbers show is the harsh reality – cutting their Social Security and Medicare benefits could push those on the brink into serious financial hardship.”

Right now, some politicians support “chained CPI” – a fancy Washington term that really means cutting Social Security by $129 billion over the next 10 years alone. The cut would start now and grow larger every year, hurting seniors the most when they can least afford it. There are also harmful Medicare proposals that would cut benefits or force patients to pay more out of their own pockets or even avoid care, while failing to contain long-term cost increases that are the real, underlying problem for health care and the federal budget.

“The ‘chained CPI’ would take thousands of dollars out of the pockets of Coloradans, and additional co-pays in Medicare would force seniors to pay more without doing anything to control costs throughout the health care system,” [Spokesperson] added. “That’s why AARP is fighting for responsible solutions that keep Medicare and Social Security strong, not harmful cuts that break the promises we’ve made to those who’ve paid in to these critical programs all their lives.”

The non-profit Kaiser Family Foundation report provides a state-specific breakdown of poverty rates among seniors using both the traditional measure of poverty and an alternative measure first released by the Census Bureau in 2011. The alternative, or ‘supplemental’ poverty measure, more accurately represents real world conditions by taking into account seniors’ disproportionately high health care costs. It finds a higher poverty rate among seniors in every state.

For more AARP Colorado resources and information, please visit www.earnedasay.org or aarp.org/co.

About AARP Colorado
Contact information and more from your state office. Learn what we are doing to champion social change and help you live your best life.