Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the cost of federal blue cross vs another?
It seems feds can maintain medical premiums at ~200-400 a month for a couple. Whereas private equivalents can pay anywhere between 2000-4000 a month.
Anonymous wrote:What is the cost of federal blue cross vs another?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just realized that it may make more sense to think about the numbers in terms of 2022 dollars.
Again, for simplicity assuming 4% annual inflation and that fed salaries and inflation keep pace:
Retiring at 62 as a fed: ~$52,000 in 2022 dollars
Retiring at 65 as a fed: ~$57,500 in 2022 dollars
Retiring at 68 as a fed: ~$63,500 in 2022 dollars
Deferred retirement at 62: $16,400 in 2022 dollars
Right so that’s about $30k more pension, which represents about $750k in capital assuming 4% withdrawal rate to save that over next 15 years she would need probably about $40k/year assuming investing in low risk/slow growth assets.
So basically any job paying $30k-$50k more salary simply replaces the pensions — assuming she even can make it 15 years in that private sector job (depends on how ageist your industry is). To be worthwhile You would like for a boost of $75k or maybe $100k to a) make it after tax dollars you are saving and b) boost savings to hedge against being laid off prior to 62 or so.
Is that salary dollars or cash?
If fed retirement at 62 at 52k pension, taxed at 22%, take home monthly = ~40.5k cash * 20 yrs (dead at 82?) = 812k cash
vs
50 at income 250k taxed at 35% = 162500 cash per year.
So to have 812k at 62 (~12 yrs), would need to put away 67666 cash a year or 91k in salary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just realized that it may make more sense to think about the numbers in terms of 2022 dollars.
Again, for simplicity assuming 4% annual inflation and that fed salaries and inflation keep pace:
Retiring at 62 as a fed: ~$52,000 in 2022 dollars
Retiring at 65 as a fed: ~$57,500 in 2022 dollars
Retiring at 68 as a fed: ~$63,500 in 2022 dollars
Deferred retirement at 62: $16,400 in 2022 dollars
Right so that’s about $30k more pension, which represents about $750k in capital assuming 4% withdrawal rate to save that over next 15 years she would need probably about $40k/year assuming investing in low risk/slow growth assets.
So basically any job paying $30k-$50k more salary simply replaces the pensions — assuming she even can make it 15 years in that private sector job (depends on how ageist your industry is). To be worthwhile You would like for a boost of $75k or maybe $100k to a) make it after tax dollars you are saving and b) boost savings to hedge against being laid off prior to 62 or so.
Is that salary dollars or cash?
If fed retirement at 62 at 52k pension, taxed at 22%, take home monthly = ~40.5k cash * 20 yrs (dead at 82?) = 812k cash
vs
50 at income 250k taxed at 35% = 162500 cash per year.
So to have 812k at 62 (~12 yrs), would need to put away 67666 cash a year or 91k in salary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just realized that it may make more sense to think about the numbers in terms of 2022 dollars.
Again, for simplicity assuming 4% annual inflation and that fed salaries and inflation keep pace:
Retiring at 62 as a fed: ~$52,000 in 2022 dollars
Retiring at 65 as a fed: ~$57,500 in 2022 dollars
Retiring at 68 as a fed: ~$63,500 in 2022 dollars
Deferred retirement at 62: $16,400 in 2022 dollars
Right so that’s about $30k more pension, which represents about $750k in capital assuming 4% withdrawal rate to save that over next 15 years she would need probably about $40k/year assuming investing in low risk/slow growth assets.
So basically any job paying $30k-$50k more salary simply replaces the pensions — assuming she even can make it 15 years in that private sector job (depends on how ageist your industry is). To be worthwhile You would like for a boost of $75k or maybe $100k to a) make it after tax dollars you are saving and b) boost savings to hedge against being laid off prior to 62 or so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GS15
Lawyer
$175k now
50 years old
15 years in gov
Ballpark pension if stay: 175k x 30 (years) x 1.1% = ~$58k
Ballpark pension if leave: 175k x 15 (years) x 1%= ~$26k
(I realize salary will grow so Est pension isn’t 100% correct)
Given the above, what is the min salary you would accept from private sector to leave?
Don't forget the effects of inflation, OP.
If you stay with the feds another 12 years (you could actually retire at 62 with 27 years of service), the pension would be ~$52k, adjusted for inflation. Assume 4% inflation per year for the next 15 years, and that would be abut $83k in 2034 dollars. If you left now and took deferred retirement, you could get $26k/year when you hit 62—but that, too, is in 2034 dollars.
Retire at 65, and those numbers become about $104k in 2027 dollars if you stay a fed...and still $26k if you take deferred retirement.
Hang on until you're 68, and those numbers become $129k (and $26k) in 2030 dollars.
Of course, all that assumes that federal salaries will keep up with inflation, and they don't (especially the cap). So the actual inflation-adjusted numbers will be lower if you stay. But I assume you get the idea: over the next 12-18 years, inflation will make a much bigger difference than your numbers suggest.
Also, don't forget that if you do leave, you can cash out your FERS contributions and and invest it. You've been a fed long enough that your contributions are still only 0.8%, so even over 15 years I don't think cashing out will get you enough money that you can do better than the pension by investing it, but it may at least be worth running the numbers.
Anonymous wrote:You are not eligible for pension yet.