Recent comments

  • I'm a bit staggered that they are lowering the cap, it reminds me of when Greenspan was espousing ARMs before the mortgage crisis and I realized he wasn't this grandfatherly figure with my best interest at heart, its clear neither is the government, or either political party.

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • We already have a system in place to recapture social security payments to high income individuals.

    It is called the tax code. Social security income is subject to income taxes so it would be very easy to change the details of the program so that very high income people would have all their social security income taxed away.
    Actually, it already works that way to a lesser degree as there is a separate calculation of how much of your social security is subject to income taxes based on your other income. As your income increases the larger the part of social security income subject to taxes is greater. If you have little or no other income none of your SS is subject to taxes.

    Reply to: Federal Workers get a Raise, Retirees get Screwed   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • Washington Post on the new budget deal:

    "Under the agreement, Medicare’s Part B premiums for a group of roughly 15 million people will increase from the current rate of $104.90 per month to $120 per month next year, plus a $3 surcharge."

    Those include:

    1) Those whose insurance premiums are not automatically subtracted from a Social Security check.
    2) Those who do not yet collect Social Security, but are enrolled in Medicare.
    3) Those who enroll in Medicare Part B next year for the very first time.
    4) Those who have incomes great enough that they are charged higher premiums.
    5) Those who are poor enough that they also qualify for Medicaid.

    Those not included:

    Because their was no COLA for next year, Social Security benefits will not increase at all in 2016. This means that roughly seven in 10 Medicare beneficiaries were “held harmless” because their Part B premiums are automatically withdrawn from their Social Security checks --- so therefore, their premiums will not go up.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/federal-eye/wp/2015/10/27/budget-dea...

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • Thank you, Brennan! Wonderful commentary! Honest, practical, generous, and appropriate. We need to speak like this as a nation! (Running for anything?? - probably not...you are unfortunately too smart to do that!)

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • My Dad had a couple of sayings, probably quotes of someone else, which are appropriate in this sort of discussion.

    The first was:
    Whenever the congress is in session, fear. Because they meet with no purpose other than to pass laws which will restrict the liberty of citizens in some way, and whether their restriction affects you immediately or not depends principally only on your situation.

    The second was:
    Politics is the business of bribing people with their own money.

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • i normally review the revisions in this report, but they hit us with 6 major releases over a 50 hour period that week, and i have reserved my Saturdays for my oil market analysis, so i had to cover all those all those reports by Saturday morning to mail on Sunday...

    last week there were just 3 reports, new housing starts, existing home sales, and state jobs reports, none of which i cover in depth, so with just two paragraphs on each i had nothing to post here...almost brought my oil coverage over here as an instapopulist, but it's the time of year where i'm rushing to get battened down for winter, and i got busy with that work...

    i will have to come up a better way to express effects on GDP...maybe "basis points" instead of "percentage points"...i think it's important to include in the headline so readers know i'm not just regurgitating a press release..,another problem is at this time of year, all the months are three syllables...maybe i'll switch to abbreviations for the months...

    Reply to: September Retail Sales Up 0.1% on Autos; Would Add 0.09 Percentage Points to 3rd Quarter GDP   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • A higher percentage of American children live in poverty today than did at the start of the Great Recession. The CBO's June 2015 report said that money transfers to the poor act as implicit taxes, reducing the labor force participation rate and depressing the economy further. The labor force participation rate in Greece is 52 percent and in Puerto Rico 43 percent. Entirely to many people are being allowed to go on government "disability" program rolls, not good for many of them in the long run and not financially sustainable to the remaining working population either. “Work” and “purpose” are intimately connected according to researchers at the University of Michigan who, for example, found that welfare payments make one unhappier than a modest income honestly earned and used to provide for one’s family.

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • We need to realize that Reagan increased Social Security taxes 33 years ago in anticipation of today. There is a 2.7 trillion dollar surplus owed Social Security by the Federal Government. The National Debt is a direct result of Republican tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy and, under Bush II, the middle class as well. Social Security revenues are down because job killing trade treaties are reducing both employment and wages. Corporate America and the uber wealthy have benefited from both. Further the Boskin Commission under Clinton recalculated the way inflation and Social Security adjustments were measured resulting in lower rates that are bogus.

    The truth is that both Social Security and Medicare are funded separately from the Federal Government. They were included in the overall Federal budget under Johnson to hide the true cost of the Vietnam War. Virtually the entire deficit is due to everything except Social Security and Medicare. The truth is Republicans are against Social Security because they are deadbeats. The Government shutdowns prove they simply don’t want to pay the bills they themselves have run up. The Social Security income cap must be eliminated and unearned income (rents, dividends, interest, royalties and capital gains going mostly to the wealthy) must be made subject to the Employee portion of both Social Security and Medicare. Social Security payments should be adjusted upward and the inflation calculation returned to reality. In short the truth is the exact opposite of what the Republicans say and the only way that today’s young people will not receive their Social Security is if they allow the Republicans to take it away from them.

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • It's not the disabled who are gaming the system, it's those who cash their checks after they die:

    One of the biggest problems involves the payment of monthly Social Security benefits to people who have died, with relatives or others continuing to collect and cash the checks. According to the IG’s report issued in March, investigators identified about 6.5 million individuals in the Social Security’s active database who would be age 112 or older – without any indication of whether they are still alive or dead. With an average U.S. life expectancy of 78.8 years, there’s more than a reasonable chance that most of those beneficiaries are deceased.

    It's not the disabled who are gaming the system, it's illegal immigrants:

    The inspector general’s report said that between 2006 and 2011, individuals using nearly 67,000 Social Security numbers generated $3.1 billion in tips, wages and self-employment income. Yet the employees' or self-employed individuals' names didn't match the Social Security number account-holders' names.

    It's not the disabled who are gaming the system, it's doctors and hospitals:

    The Government Accountability Office in early October confirmed that Medicare and Medicaid fraud and overpayments were spinning out of control and posed a serious long-term budget challenge. In fiscal 2014 alone, 22 agencies approved improper Medicare, Medicaid and Earned Income Tax Credit payments totaling $124.7 billion — an increase of $18.9 billion or 15 percent from the previous year, according to the report. 

    It's not the disabled (in the U.S.) who are gaming the system, it's people in Puerto Rico:

    A federal grand jury in Puerto Rico returned 39 separate indictments charging one doctor, Luis Escabi-Pérez, and 39 others of fraud in the application process for Social Security Administration (SSA) disability insurance benefits in Puerto Rico, according to Puerto Ricco’s U.S. attorney’s office.

    SOURCES:

    http://oig.ssa.gov/sites/default/files/audit/full/pdf/A-06-14-34030_0.pdf

    http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2015/10/27/Here-s-New-Plan-Crack-Down-Social-Security-Fraud

    http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-16-92T
     

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • They have to be kidding, last I heard it was $711 to live on. What a joke. There is no way to live on that little and they want to cut it by 20%? That's just a crime.

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • Good sleuthing. The reduction in cap for Social Security contributions is really troubling. That's the opposite direction from where it needs to go. And I've had a salary of $250K and enjoyed having my SS deductions cap out halfway through the year, but there is no reason to give that kind of break to high earners on the backs of the elderly and disabled. I've also had a mother trying to live on $1000 a month from Social Security, when her assisted living facility was $4000 a month. This shifts costs back onto the middle class families of seniors who will have to support them. And it's just greedy, stupid and unfair.

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • (Finally, a new report)

    One widely-reported proposal aimed at saving money in disability by taking it away from disabled people would have changed the formula for benefits from one based on the recipients pre-disability wages to a "flat benefit" tied to the federal poverty level.

    This would have meant lower benefits for more than half of new disability recipients. (Existing recipients wouldn't be affected.) According to the Heritage Foundation, its chief promoter, the change would cut benefits for newly-filing disabled workers to $981 a month, the federal poverty level for a single person. That compares to the average benefit today of $1,165.

    Heritage said that based on the existing demographics of the disabled population, 47% of new applicants would receive higher benefits than they would under the existing formula, and the rest would get less. It estimated the savings at $168 billion over 10 years.

    The "flat benefit" didn't make it into the final bill. Curiously, however, the savings it was expected to provide was still being cited by some Republicans as a point in favor of the deal.

    http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik/la-fi-mh-social-security-medicar...

    * One has to always sleep with one eye open whenever a member of Congress is burning the midnight oil, because when no one is looking, they will slip an amendment into a bill -- to do just this.

    Reply to: New Budget Deal Cuts Social Security, But How?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • That claim that somehow labor arbitrage is a humanitarian mission is the biggest insult to working people of all time. Up there with let them eat cake level of lie.

    These trade deals don't just ship jobs overseas, but put peoples in slave labor conditions and kill local economies. There are no labor and environmental standards in these deals but even that wouldn't stop it.

    Reply to: CEOs Offshore Jobs for "Humanitarian" Reasons   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • Key findings include child care costs account for a significant portion of family budgets, and is particularly unaffordable for minimum-wage workers.

    http://www.epi.org/publication/child-care-affordability/

    Reply to: Is $15 a hour too much? Is $7.25 too little?   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • I see the statistics on the average deviation for revisions but still it makes these reports seem like made up numbers.

    BTW: Titles need to be shorter for articles.

    Thx for publishing these, I've had a death in the family, now very behind with writing.

    Reply to: September Retail Sales Up 0.1% on Autos; Would Add 0.09 Percentage Points to 3rd Quarter GDP   8 years 5 months ago
    EPer:
  • A zero COLA also freezes the amount of Social Security’s “taxable maximum,” or the maximum wage on which workers and their employers pay Social Security payroll taxes (currently $118,500). When average wages rise, the taxable maximum rises — except in years when there’s no COLA.

    The taxable maximum would be $122,700 next year if it were allowed to rise as it normally does. This quirk in the law will cost Social Security about $5 billion in revenue next year.

    http://www.cbpp.org/blog/no-cola-for-2016-will-affect-medicare-premiums-...

    * Members of Congress are paid $174,000 a year -- so ALREADY they aren't paying SS taxes on 100% of their wages.

    Reply to: Federal Workers get a Raise, Retirees get Screwed   8 years 6 months ago
    EPer:
  • our estimates converged...i have PCE adding 2.12 percentage points to GDP, up from my last estimate of 2.03 percentage points ...their estimate was cut from 2.6 percentage points to 2.2...

    in addition, they added 10 basis points on retail inventories, and i couldnt see that as anything but a negative...in fact, i have a sense that we'll see the largest hit from inventories in this recovery (i dont put numbers on that because i can't get a handle on how to deflate them, considering the multiple indices used, and that inventories from remaining from previous months are valued at the time they entered the inventory)

    what bothered me about their change to their GDP estimate is that they released it the same day of the retail sales report, ie, before they had the consumer price data...you can't estimate real PCE without knowing price changes unless you're using some kind of voodoo..

    Reply to: September Retail Sales Up 0.1% on Autos; Would Add 0.09 Percentage Points to 3rd Quarter GDP   8 years 6 months ago
    EPer:
  • Multi-billionaire corporate raider Carl Icahn (who supports multi-billionaire real estate tycoon Donald Trump) told CNBC that he is putting $150 million into a Super PAC aimed at targeting inversions, the practice of companies moving their headquarters overseas to pay less in taxes.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/21/us-usa-election-icahn-idUSKCN0...

    Reply to: Jeb Bush: "Of course the rich will get richer..."   8 years 6 months ago
    EPer:
  • I hate to tell ya but the Atlanta Fed never misses on their calculations, at least not anything I've seen to date. Regardless the impact to GDP is nil.

    Reply to: September Retail Sales Up 0.1% on Autos; Would Add 0.09 Percentage Points to 3rd Quarter GDP   8 years 6 months ago
    EPer:
  • the 1015 day average is deceiving...i figure a lot of them have been living rent free for 5 or 6 years, possibly because of compromised titles that make legal foreclosure difficult...look at that "average days delinquent for FC" column on the chart, see how the average went up by more than 100 days each of several years...that suggests that some old mortgages weren't being touched over that period...based on that, i'd guess the foreclosure inventory to include a large number of 5 year deliquent mortgages and a near equilvant number of newly delinquent mortgages to result in that average...

    Reply to: Mortgage Delinquencies and Foreclosures Increased in August; Mean Time in Foreclosure at 1015 Days   8 years 6 months ago
    EPer:

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