But we already effectively are, so we should just call it that!
Now back to your regularly-schooled boomer teacher retirement talks.
Generation X here, go back to eating tide pods Millennial.
But we already effectively are, so we should just call it that!
Now back to your regularly-schooled boomer teacher retirement talks.
It’s a mentalityGeneration X here, go back to eating tide pods Millennial.
Ok, sorry to interrupt the shelter in place talk of the last 50 pages.
I say we dont do a SIP. Who’s up?
And at 55 they take 60% of that 60%. So the entitlement is 24%.
Oops it would net 40% so I adjusted the last number.
Sorry but no, if your wife at 55 has hit her rule of 88 she gets 60% of her highest five year average. They is no penalty for because of age if she has hit her rule of 88.
The Rule of 88 is when a member is age 55 or older, and the sum of the member’s age at the last birthday and years of service equals or exceeds 88.
The Rule of 62/20 is when a member is age 62 and has at least 20 years of service.
A member can reach normal retirement age by meeting either of these rules, or by reaching age 65.
A member who retires before normal retirement age has an early-retirement reduction applied to his or her benefit.
The benefit amount is determined by a formula. The formula includes your average annual salary from the five years when you earned the most and a multiplier based on your years of service.
The multiplier for Regular members is 2% a year for the first 30 years of service and 1% a year for the next 5 years, up to a maximum of 65%.
The multiplier for Special Service members is approximately 2.7272% a year for the first 22 years and then 1.5% for years 23 – 30, up to a maximum of 72%.
https://www.ipers.org/retirees/retiree-faqs
Regularly-scheduled xoomer retirement talks*Generation X here, go back to eating tide pods Millennial.
So, you are saying that IPERS is wrong on the information that they sent her and I should go off what you say???
See page 13.
https://www.ipers.org/sites/default/files/media/Ready to Retire Overview_August 30 2017.pdf
No, I am saying that the quote they give in the statement is if she retired TODAY, when she has not hit her rule of 88 or if she never taught again and waited until she is 55 to draw it out, a person cannot draw until age 55 unless they are disabled. When she hits her rule of 88, then according to state law she is entitled to 60% of her 5 highest years earning. As long as she has 30 years in and is at least 55 years of age.
The page you quoted page 13 only matters if you wife has not hit her rule of 88, then she would be penalized at around 6% for each year that she is less than that. If she hits her rule of 88, is 55 and 30 years in, there is NO penalty.
Call up IPERS and they will tell you the same thing.
The shift in opinion on econ blogs from potential for a V shaped recovery to potential for long term sustained economic wreckage has been pretty scary to read in real time.
Most are taking the position that there is going to be significant demand, labor, supply chain and monetary challenges that will hamper the economy in ways the Great Recession never did.