Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IIRC and this is very much a ballpark I think the total pension cost is something like 14% or 15% and you are paying 4.4% of that cost (I assume since you said stay until 5 years you were hired recently and are not in the older versions of FERS). So, you can think of the FERS benefit as being about 10% of your salary.
This is because the government pays as it goes. If they gave you a raise and tpld you to invest it over several decades while working and then withdraw it to provide your own annuity, it wouldn’t be 10% it would be more like 2%.
PP here and 2% seems low for a 100% risk free investment although I guess you would have your 4% back top so total investment of 6% of salary. I think it's important to adjust for the risk free nature of the FERS investment vs investing in the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IIRC and this is very much a ballpark I think the total pension cost is something like 14% or 15% and you are paying 4.4% of that cost (I assume since you said stay until 5 years you were hired recently and are not in the older versions of FERS). So, you can think of the FERS benefit as being about 10% of your salary.
This is because the government pays as it goes. If they gave you a raise and tpld you to invest it over several decades while working and then withdraw it to provide your own annuity, it wouldn’t be 10% it would be more like 2%.
PP here and 2% seems low for a 100% risk free investment although I guess you would have your 4% back top so total investment of 6% of salary. I think it's important to adjust for the risk free nature of the FERS investment vs investing in the market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IIRC and this is very much a ballpark I think the total pension cost is something like 14% or 15% and you are paying 4.4% of that cost (I assume since you said stay until 5 years you were hired recently and are not in the older versions of FERS). So, you can think of the FERS benefit as being about 10% of your salary.
This is because the government pays as it goes. If they gave you a raise and tpld you to invest it over several decades while working and then withdraw it to provide your own annuity, it wouldn’t be 10% it would be more like 2%.
Anonymous wrote:IIRC and this is very much a ballpark I think the total pension cost is something like 14% or 15% and you are paying 4.4% of that cost (I assume since you said stay until 5 years you were hired recently and are not in the older versions of FERS). So, you can think of the FERS benefit as being about 10% of your salary.