Home · Maps · About

Home > OTChat
 

[ Read Responses | Post a New Response | Return to the Index ]
[ First in Thread ]

 

view flat

Re: How 21,000 wealthy Americans avoided paying income tax

Posted by salaamallah@hotmail.com on Mon Jun 11 01:04:19 2012, in response to Re: How 21,000 wealthy Americans avoided paying income tax, posted by Mr Mabstoa on Tue Jun 5 23:42:09 2012.

fiogf49gjkf0d
Forced to take Social Security
Posted by salaamallah@hotmail.com on Sun Jun 10 23:03:50 2012

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. — This retirement oasis in the desert has long beckoned
those who want to spin out their golden years playing golf and sitting by the
pool in the arid sunshine.

But for Clare Keany, who turned 62 last fall and cannot find work, it feels more
like a prison. Just a few miles from the gated estates of corporate chieftains
and Hollywood stars, Ms. Keany lives in a tiny mobile home, barely getting by on
little more than $1,082 a month from Social Security.

"I would rather be functioning and having a job somewhere," said Ms. Keany,
whose pixie haircut, trim build and crinkling smile suggest someone much younger
than her years. "I really don't enjoy living like this. I've got too much to do
still."

Even as most Americans are delaying retirement to bolster their savings
accounts, the recession and its protracted aftermath have forced many older
people who are out of work to draw Social Security much earlier than they had
planned.

According to an analysis by Steve Goss, chief actuary for the Social Security
Administration, about 200,000 more people filed initial claims in 2009 and 2010
than the agency had predicted before the recession and he said the trend most
likely continued in 2011 and 2012, though that is harder to quantify. The most
likely reason is joblessness.

Ms. Keany had always expected to work into her 70s and add to her retirement
cushion. But after losing her job as an executive assistant at an advertising
agency in 2008, she searched fruitlessly for full-time work and exhausted her
unemployment benefits. For a while, she strung together odd jobs and lived off
her 401(k) retirement and profit-sharing accounts. Then, this year, with her
savings depleted and no job offers in sight, she reluctantly applied for Social
Security.

Gazing out the window where the Santa Rosa mountains rise behind the mobile home
park, she said, "It just seems a waste of a life, to be honest."

Drawing Social Security early has repercussions that will be hard to overcome
even if the economy — and her work prospects — improve. By collecting four years
shy of her full retirement age, Ms. Keany will receive a reduced monthly benefit
for the rest of her life. Those who collect early get 20 to 30 percent less a
month than they would get if they waited until full retirement age, which varies
by year of birth. People in Ms. Keany's age bracket are expected to live an
average of close to 23 more years.

"The most potent lever that individuals can pull in trying to get themselves a
secure retirement income is to postpone claiming" Social Security, said Alicia
H. Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

As recently as a decade ago, half of those eligible claimed Social Security at
62. But that share has been falling because people are living longer and still
want to work as well as shore up retirement funds. That makes it even more
galling for those who are forced to claim early because of unemployment. Several
people interviewed mentioned blows to their self-esteem along with abandoned
dreams of a more comfortable old age.

According to an analysis by Richard W. Johnson, director of the retirement
policy program at the Urban Institute, 37 percent of older workers who lost
their jobs between 2008 and 2011 and did not return to work ended up claiming
Social Security as soon as they turned 62.

Ms. Keany, who was born in Britain, was making $64,000 a year as an
administrative manager for a boutique advertising agency in Santa Monica when
the firm lost two of its biggest clients in one week. She has nearly three
decades of experience in the United States. She has managed offices, arranged
visits by foreign dignitaries, composed employee handbooks and finessed
demanding bosses. She said she had also run errands for movie producers,
organized home offices and coordinated the administrative details of a drug
study.

Those years of experience now work against her, she thinks. "I'm overly
qualified, overly skilled," she said.

Her age is also most likely an impediment. After they lose a job, older workers
tend to have a much harder time finding another than younger workers.

A Government Accountability Office report found that just under a third of those
55 to 64 who lost their jobs from 2007 through 2009 had found full-time work by
January 2010, compared with 41 percent of people 25 to 54. The median duration
of unemployment for those 55 and older was 34.1 weeks in May, according to the
Labor Department, in contrast to 22 weeks for all jobless people over 16.

Ms. Keany, who is single and has no children, tried a change of geography.
Because the economy in California was so weak, she moved in with friends in
Charlotte, N.C., three years ago in hopes of having better luck there. She
signed up with employment offices and volunteered, but did not find paying work.

Another friend invited her to stay on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, where
Ms. Keany eventually began work at a women's recovery house in exchange for room
and utilities. Then Hurricane Irene hit last August and damaged the house. Ms.
Keany could not afford to stay.

In a panic, she used the last of her savings to move to Palm Springs last
October and buy a $19,000 one-bedroom mobile home in the same park where friends
lived two doors down.

"I was so frantic at that point and I was at my wit's end," said Ms. Keany,
saying she still planned to find a job. "I thought at least with Palm Springs
it's a retirement resort community and I know there's a lot of business here as
well."

She scoured Craigslist for affluent residents seeking personal assistants. She
took a one-month job in Los Angeles, chauffeuring the principal actor on a
movie. She applied for a job as a concierge at a Marriott Hotel, but withdrew
after hearing it offered only eight hours a week.

Finally, in January, she gave in and filed for Social Security. Her monthly
check covers the $336 mobile home park fee plus utilities, her cellphone bill,
insurance and a satellite dish. She is also paying $100 a month in credit card
debt. To save money, she has canceled the data plan on her BlackBerry and cut
back on fresh fruits and vegetables.

After a wind storm blew out a window, she covered it with a tarp because she
could not afford to replace the glass.

Ms. Keany is still hoping to find work. Social Security recipients younger than
full retirement age can earn up to $14,640 a year without sacrificing any of
their monthly benefit. At Ms. Keany's age, for every $2 earned over that amount,
Social Security deducts $1 in benefits.

This month, she flew back to the Outer Banks to stay with friends and work part
time in two gift shops over the summer. If she cannot find permanent work in
North Carolina, she plans to return to Palm Springs in the fall.

She is discouraged by what she sees as youth-obsessed employers. "We're already
has-beens, which is so sad," Ms. Keany said. "Some of us are still pretty
productive."

yahoo news



(There are no responses to this message.)

Post a New Response

Your Handle:

Your Password:

E-Mail Address:

Subject:

Message:



Before posting.. think twice!


[ Return to the Message Index ]