Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FERS is a three legged stool - SS, 1% annuity (pension) and Thrift Savings. The problem is the first two are promises, which can easily be broken. Thrift Savings is tangible and in the here and now. Thrift Savings can be confiscated through both taxation and/or inflation, however.
Life's a risk, do the best you can, that's all you can do.
The annuity is an obligation(at least that portion that you have already accumulated) not a promise.
Anonymous wrote:FERS is a three legged stool - SS, 1% annuity (pension) and Thrift Savings. The problem is the first two are promises, which can easily be broken. Thrift Savings is tangible and in the here and now. Thrift Savings can be confiscated through both taxation and/or inflation, however.
Life's a risk, do the best you can, that's all you can do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not, and don't, ignore SS. Worst case scenario is that it pays 70-80% of current benefits (or that it's means tested which is about the same thing probably).
I think FERS get "COLA-lite"-- something like 1-2 percentage points below the calculated COLA.
Why is this the worst case scenario? I admit that I do not pay too much attention, and I am not a doomsday type person. But is it really outside the realm of possibiltiy that Congress could pas a law severely curtailing SS to a MUCH lower benefit?
Anonymous wrote:I would not, and don't, ignore SS. Worst case scenario is that it pays 70-80% of current benefits (or that it's means tested which is about the same thing probably).
I think FERS get "COLA-lite"-- something like 1-2 percentage points below the calculated COLA.
Do they adjust the annuity for inflation? Wasn't sure why you put that in parentheses OP...
Anonymous wrote:I admit that I have asked this question before, but I am still not clear on an answer (and I have asked others offline as well.) Basically, I'm not sure how much to weigh the annuity in my calculation of what to save for retirement.
I know that if I wait until 62 and 20 years of service, FERS will pay 1.1% of my high-three salary per year of service. At that point, being very conservative, I would guess that it will be approximately $2000 per month (not adjusted for inflation). That is not enough money to live on comfortably, but it is real money. I am also putting 10% of my gross into the TSP, plus my 5% match, so a total of 15% of my gross invested per month.
In the abstract, I feel like this should be "enough." But then I notice that many feds seem to disregard the annuity when planning for retirement and pretend it isn't going to happen. IS that out of concern that the plan will change to eliminate the annuity? Because the annuity is not a meaningful number? I gather there must be something wrong with my reasoning, but I do not know what it is.
Thanks in advance