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This paper examines the consumption response to the 1972 Social Security benefit
increase. Nominal benefits were increased by 20 percent while annual cost of living
adjustments (COLAs) were contemporaneously implemented and scheduled to begin in
less than three years. Taken in isolation, this benefit increase could be viewed as a large
and permanent increase in real Social Security benefits. However, the prevailing high
rates of inflation that were the impetus for the COLA legislation may have caused
households to view the permanent real benefit increase to be substantially less than 20
percent. Using data from the 1972-73 Survey of Consumer Expenditures, the results
provide a mixed picture of the consumption impact of the benefit increase. Strictly nondurable
consumption increases significantly at the time of the benefit increase. However,
this increase does not persist. Furthermore, the likelihood of making any purchases from
an array of durable good categories does not change throughout this period.
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