Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Since the great announcement of the 1.5% increase effective 1/2014 I have received notices for my Medicare supplemental care premiums increasing 2.7%...my medicare part D increased 7.8%....my long term care premium increased 5.3%.
The net, again, is more being spent each year than the previous just based on these three elements. Not even attempting to account all the other increases in living costs. 1.5% increase in SS = ![]() ![]() btk. |
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#2
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But I am sure that they will get their normal raises in 2014.
Z
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Jacksonville, Florida Andover, New Jersey The Villages Second star to the right, then straight on 'til morning. |
#3
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Live with it. I find it fair. The increase is based on a formula. A couples of years there was no increase; one year it was like 5-6%.
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That which does not destroy you, makes you stronger- Nietzsche |
#4
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I understand your general concern.
But SS is not intended to be the complete solution for funding retirement. Regarding the inflation increase... that is in the cross-hairs for deficit/debt reduction. So you are unlikely to see any improvement in the future. BTW; I applaud your effort to plan for LTC. |
#5
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interesting to read posts from people who rail against the government giving money to those on the lower socio-economic rungs, money to survive or have a roof over their head. If you don't like the way the increase in SS is calculated now, wait until the GOP insists that decreasing the rate by going to chained CPI be part of any bargain and Obama has indicated his willingness to accept chained CPI as part of a grand bargain.
Social Security Cut Would Put More Money In Seniors' Pockets, GOP Claims |
#6
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George |
#7
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Men plug the dikes of their most needed beliefs with whatever mud they can find. - Clifford Geertz |
#8
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the intent of my post was to not complain about or seek parity from SS....but merely point out that in today's health care escalations alone there is no gain.
Indexes are indexes just like polls. The most accurate for me is my own personal budget which is what I measure against....money availabel + money in - money out leaves a smaller and smaller balance each and every year. Unlike the government, I MUST live within my finite means. btk |
#9
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I took the original post as a statement of how the SS benefit increase is cancelled out by the other accompanying increases.
There are many concepts to consider about the program. One is that the program has always been conceptually formed and funded as "insurance", to wit: In the United States, Social Security is primarily the Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) federal program. The original Social Security Act (1935) and the current version of the Act, as amended, encompass several social welfare and social Insurance programs. |
#10
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Z
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Jacksonville, Florida Andover, New Jersey The Villages Second star to the right, then straight on 'til morning. |
#11
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"For all the talk you hear from Capitol Hill about running government more like a business, Congress has a retirement plan that would make any Fortune 500 executive blush. Members can retire younger, having contributed fewer of their own dollars, than almost any worker in the country even more than the generous terms other federal workers get.
At a time when traditional pensions are disappearing and many workers are struggling to save for retirement, the Federal Employees' Retirement System (FERS), an old-school defined benefit pension program, pays 215 former congressmen and women an average of $39,576, for an average of 16 years of service, according to a recent Congressional Research Service report. That's about what the average private-sector worker makes in retirement from all sources after a lifetime of work, according to the Employees Benefits Research Institute. The average income that worker gets from a pension is about $8,800 if they have one. In 2010, fewer than 15 percent of private sector employees were enrolled in a defined-benefit pension...." How Your Retirement Package Compares to Members of Congress: How Your Retirement Package Compares to Members of Congress |
#12
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If they were accurate, which is near impossible, the adjustment would make your SS payments yield the same spending power as the previous year. |
#13
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Not much again at 1.5% and the last one was 1.7%.
There's something to be said for pre planning, in terms of builing a nest egg. ![]()
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"It doesn't cost "nuttin", to be nice". ![]() I just want to do the right thing! Uncle Joe, (my hero). Last edited by 2BNTV; 11-17-2013 at 10:08 PM. |
#14
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They care about themselves AND those who put them there by support/money. They are employees too...
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#15
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Throughout one's working life Social Security is an ONEROUS tax of about 15% of one's gross earned income. Workers are further taxed because even though the money is taken from their paychecks and they never see it and cannot spend it their Social Security deductions are not deductible from US or state income tax. Their Social Security deductions are taxed as income! The way I look at it whether I wanted to or not, I had no choice; I paid in a lot (and still am contributing from my earned income). A contract exists. It is only fair I receive distributions.
The most ridiculous part of it is the Medicare deduction from one's social security distribution. It goes up as one's taxable income goes up. An analogy would be going into a McDonald's and ordering a hamburger. If you make $20K/year it cost you $5; if you make in the neighborhood of $100K or more it costs you some multiple of $5.00, say $20!
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"No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth." Plato βTo argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead.β Thomas Paine |
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