Enjoy the current installment of “Weekend Reading For Financial Planners” – this week’s edition kicks off with the news that the Social Security Administration announced that the annual Cost Of Living Adjustment (COLA) for 2026 will be 2.8%, up from 2.5% in 2025 but below the ten-year average COLA of 3.1%. While this figure can support cash flow planning in the coming year, what could be more impactful for clients entering or in retirement is the potential for a change in COLA calculation to be a part of future legislation designed to shore up the Social Security system (before the Social Security trust fund is expected to be exhausted in the early 2030s, at which point [absent policy changes] it would be able to pay out approximately 80% of benefits). Notably such changes could boost or reduce future COLAs, as Congress could seek lower COLAs to reduce costs to the system (e.g., by adopting the “chained CPI” inflation measure or reducing COLAs for higher-income recipients) or raise them (e.g., by adopting the “CPI-E” figure, which is designed to track the spending patterns of older Americans) as a ‘sweetener’ in a package of tax increases and/or benefit reductions.

Also in industry news this week:

From there, we have several articles on insurance planning:

We also have a number of articles on behavioral finance:

We wrap up with three final articles, all about finding meaning in the modern age:

Enjoy the ‘light’ reading!

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