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James
Gashel, NFB Director of Governmental Affairs
Social Security, SSI, and
Medicare Facts for 1998
by James Gashel
The beginning of each year
brings with it annual adjustments in Social Security programs. The changes include
new tax rates, higher exempt earnings amounts, Social Security and SSI cost-of-living
increases, and changes in deductible and co-insurance requirements under Medicare.
Here are the new facts for 1998:
FICA and Self-Employment
Tax Rates: The FICA tax rate for employees and their employers remains at 7.65
percent. This rate includes payments to the Old Age, Survivors, and Disability
Insurance (OASDI) Trust Fund of 6.2 percent and an additional 1.45 percent payment
to the Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund, from which payments under Medicare
are made. Self-employed persons continue to pay a Social Security tax of 15.3
percent, which includes 12.4 percent paid to the OASDI trust fund and 2.9 percent
paid to the HI trust fund.
Ceiling on Earnings Subject
to Tax: During 1997, the ceiling on taxable earnings for contributions to the
OASDI trust fund was $65,400. The taxable income ceiling for contributions to
the OASDI trust fund during 1998 will be $68,400. All earnings are subject to
the HI trust fund tax contribution of 1.45 percent for employees or 2.9 percent
for self-employed persons. Quarters of Coverage: Eligibility for retirement,
survivors, and disability insurance benefits is based in large part on the number
of quarters of coverage earned by any individual during periods of work. Anyone
may earn up to four quarters of coverage during a single year. During 1997 a
Social Security quarter of coverage was credited for earnings of $670 in any
calendar quarter. Anyone who earned $2,680 for the year (regardless of when
the earnings occurred during the year) was given four quarters of coverage.
In 1998 a Social Security quarter of coverage will be credited for earnings
of $700 during a calendar quarter. Four quarters can be earned with annual earnings
of $2,800.
Exempt Earnings: The monthly
earnings exemption for blind people who receive disability insurance benefits
was $1000 of gross earned income during 1997. During 1998 the monthly exempt
amount is $1,050. Technically this exemption is referred to as an amount of
monthly gross earnings which does not show "substantial gainful activity."
Earnings of $1,050 or more per month before taxes for a blind SSDI beneficiary
in 1998 will show substantial gainful activity after subtracting any unearned
(or subsidy) income and applying any deductions for impairment-related work
expenses.
Social Security Benefit
Amounts for 1998: All Social Security benefits, including retirement, survivors,
disability, and dependents' benefits are increased by 2.1 percent beginning
with the checks received in January, 1998. The exact dollar increase for any
individual will depend upon the amount being paid.
Standard SSI Benefit Increase:
Beginning January, 1998, the federal payment amounts for SSI individuals and
couples are as follows: individuals, $494 per month; couples, $741 per month.
These amounts are increased from individuals, $484 per month; couples, $726
per month.
Medicare Deductibles and
Co-insurance: Medicare Part A coverage provides hospital insurance to most Social
Security beneficiaries. The co-insurance payment is the charge that the hospital
makes to a Medicare beneficiary for any hospital stay.
Medicare then pays the
hospital charges above the beneficiary's co-insurance amount.
The Part A co-insurance
amount charged for hospital services within a benefit period of not longer than
sixty days was $760 during 1997 and is increased to $764 during 1998. Beginning
with the sixty-first day and through the ninetieth day, there is a daily co-insurance
amount of $191 per day, up from $190 in 1997.
Each Medicare beneficiary
has sixty "reserve days" for hospital services provided within a benefit
period longer than ninety days. The co-insurance amount to be paid during each
reserve day is $382,
up from $380 in 1997.
Part A of Medicare pays
all covered charges for services in a skilled nursing facility for the first
twenty days within a benefit period. From the twenty-first day through the one-hundredth
day within a benefit period, the Part A co-insurance amount for services received
in a skilled nursing facility is $95.50 per day, up from $95.00 per day in 1997.
For most beneficiaries
there is no monthly premium charge for Medicare Part A coverage. Those who become
ineligible for Social Security Disability Insurance cash benefits can continue
to receive Medicare Part A coverage premium-free for thirty-nine months following
the end of a trial work period. After that time the individual may purchase
Part A coverage. The premium rate for this coverage during 1998 is $309 per
month. During 1998 this premium rate is $170 for individuals who have earned
at least thirty quarters
of coverage under Social-Security-covered employment.
The Medicare Part B (medical
insurance) deductible remains at $100 in 1998. This is an annual deductible
amount. The Medicare Part B basic monthly premium rate will not increase from
the $43.80 charged to each beneficiary and withheld from Social Security checks
during 1997. Medicare Part B coverage may be continued for persons who complete
a trial work period and become ineligible to receive Social Security Disability
Insurance cash benefits. This monthly premium rate is $43.80, the same amount
paid by Social Security beneficiaries through withholding from their monthly
Social Security checks.
Programs Which Help with
Medicare Deductibles and Premiums:
Low-income Medicare beneficiaries
may qualify for help with payments. Assistance is available through two programs—QMB
(Qualified Medicare Beneficiary program) and SLMB (Specified Low-Income Medicare
Beneficiary program).
Under the QMB program states
are required to pay the Medicare Part A (Hospital Insurance) and Part B (Medical
Insurance) premiums, deductibles, and co-insurance expenses for Medicare beneficiaries
who meet the program's income and resource requirements. Under the SLMB program,
states pay only the full Medicare Part B monthly premium ($43.80 in 1998). Eligibility
for the SLMB program may be retroactive for up to three calendar months.
Both programs are administered
by the Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) in conjunction with the states.
In order to qualify in any state, the income of an individual or couple must
be less than the threshold amount which is announced for each year. The threshold
amount is revised annually to reflect changes in national poverty level guidelines.
The rules vary from state to state; but in general: A person may qualify for
the QMB program if his or her income is approximately $678 per month for an
individual and $905 per month for a couple. These amounts apply for residents
of forty-eight of the fifty states and the District of Columbia. In Alaska the
income threshold used to define poverty is approximately $843 per month for
an individual and $1,126 per month for couples. In Hawaii income must be less
than approximately $776 per month for an individual and $1,037 per month for
couples.
For the SLMB program, the
income of an individual cannot exceed $809 per month or $1,081 for a couple
in forty-eight of the fifty states and the District of Columbia. In Alaska the
income amount is $1,007 for an individual and $1,347 for couples.
An individual in Hawaii
can qualify if his or her income is approximately $927 per month; for couples
the amount is $1,240.
Resources—such as
bank accounts or stocks—may not exceed $4,000 for one person or $6,000
for a family of two. (Resources generally are things you own. However, not everything
is counted. The house you live in, for example, doesn't count, and in some circumstances
your car may not count either.)
If you qualify for assistance
under the QMB program, you will not have to pay Medicare's hospital deductible,
which is $100 per benefit period in 1998; the daily co-insurance charges for
extended hospital and skilled nursing facility stays; the Medicare Medical Insurance
(Part B) premium, which is $43.80 per month in 1998; the $100 annual Part B
deductible; or the 20 percent co-insurance for services covered by Medicare
Part B, depending on which doctor you go to.
If you qualify for assistance
under the SLMB program, you will not have to pay the $43.80 monthly Part B premium.
If you think you qualify but you have not filed for Medicare Part A, contact
Social Security to find out if you need to file an application. Further information
about filing for Medicare is available from your local Social Security office
or Social Security's toll-free number, (800) 772-1213.
Remember, only your state
can decide if you're eligible for help from the QMB or SLMB program. So, if
you're elderly or disabled, have low income and very limited assets, and are
a Medicare beneficiary, contact your state or local welfare or social service
agency to apply. For more information about either program, call HCFA's toll-free
telephone number, (800) 638-6833.
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