HR-491-119
ASSUMING FIRST SPONSORSHIP - Mr. Walkinshaw asked unanimous consent that he may hereafter be considered as the first sponsor of H.R. 491, a bill originally introduced by Representative Connolly, for the purpose of adding cosponsors and requesting reprintings pursuant to clause 7 of rule XII. Agreed to without objection.
What it does
This bill would change how annual cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) are calculated for retirees covered by the Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS). Under current law, FERS COLAs are capped — retirees receive less than the full inflation increase when inflation rises above 2%. This bill would require that FERS annuity payments be increased by the full percentage change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) every year, no matter how high inflation climbs.
Who benefits
Current and future FERS retirees and survivors receiving FERS annuity payments — a group estimated at roughly 2–3 million people. Retirees would benefit most in high-inflation years, when the current cap causes their purchasing power to fall behind rising prices. Federal employees currently working who plan to retire under FERS would also benefit from stronger future retirement income protections.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers broadly, as the U.S. Treasury would be required to pay out larger annuity amounts in years when inflation exceeds 2%. The federal budget would face higher mandatory spending obligations, potentially affecting funding available for other government programs. Future Congresses would have less flexibility to adjust FERS COLA formulas in response to fiscal conditions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current FERS COLA formula forces retirees to absorb a portion of inflation costs that they cannot control, steadily eroding the real value of their retirement income over time. Federal employees accepted lower salaries than comparable private-sector workers in exchange for retirement security — capping COLAs breaks that implicit agreement. In high-inflation periods, like 2021–2023, the gap between actual inflation and the capped COLA can amount to hundreds or thousands of dollars per year for individual retirees. Supporters contend that a retirement system that does not keep pace with inflation is not truly secure, and that fully honoring the commitment made to federal workers is both a matter of fairness and sound workforce policy that helps the government attract and retain talent.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that fully indexing FERS annuities to inflation would significantly increase mandatory federal spending, adding to the national debt at a time of fiscal strain — particularly in high-inflation years when the cost would be greatest. They contend that FERS retirees already receive a more generous retirement package than most private-sector workers, who typically have no defined-benefit pension at all, making full inflation protection an above-market benefit funded by taxpayers. Opponents also note that the current tiered COLA formula was deliberately designed to balance retirement security with fiscal sustainability, and that removing the cap could create open-ended spending obligations that are difficult to reverse. Some argue that the same fiscal resources could alternatively be directed toward broader programs serving larger populations.