CAP argues that addressing income inequality could help shore up the Social Security trust fund, and that raising the covered income limit back to the 90 percent of 1983 could eliminate a quarter of a 75-year-long expected deficit in the system.
Blog Archives
GOP plea on Social Security disability: Do something, Obama
President Barack Obama’s new budget plan released last week would accomplish this transfer by temporarily adjusting the formula that distributes receipts from the 6.2 percent federal payroll tax, which workers and their employers pay to finance both the retirement and disability programs.
Retirement: 10 ways to live frugally
By Nanci Hellmich; USA TODAY ~ Feb 10, 2015
More than half of people in the USA with significant savings fear going broke in retirement, a recent survey showed, but there are ways to live frugally to try to keep that from happening.
The first step is to create a budget and then get serious about where you can trim, financial experts say. “I am a firm believer in written financial plans, not back-of-the-envelope plans,” says Ray Ferrara, a financial planner in Clearwater, Fla. Within your plan, you should have a budget and an investment strategy that meets your tolerance for risk, he says.
IRS List: The Dirty Dozen Tax Scams for 2015
By Internal Revenue Service; NBC 10 ~ Feb 10, 2015
After a bag full of tax documents with personal information was found lying on a Philadelphia street, NBC10 decided to do some digging. NBC10’s Cydney Long has tips on tax season safety. Even children can be targets of identity theft! (Published Tuesday, Feb 10, 2015) Updated 27 minutes ago.
Aggressive phone calls top the Internal Revenue Service’s list of “Dirty Dozen” tax scams in 2015. The government warned taxpayers to be aware — the early weeks of filing season are when phone scams tend to be rampant.
Pension plans, once inviolable promises to employees, are getting cut
By Michael A. Fletcher; The Washington Post ~ Feb 09, 2015
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Tax revenue is up, home foreclosures are down and after a long absence, robust economic growth has returned to this sprawling city. But as far as municipal workers here are concerned, it feels like the bad times never left.
Police and firefighters are on the verge of seeing their retirement benefits cut. Other city employees are certain to be next.
“The city is the one who put us in this position,” said Art Doring, who has been a city firefighter for 10 years. “When the market was great before the crash, they did not make payments into the pension. The chickens have come home to roost, and we are the ones who have to pay.”
Should You Save More For Retirement Or Pay Off Your Mortgage Early?
By Erik Carter; Forbes ~ Feb 06, 2015
One of the most common questions we get is whether to put savings toward paying off a mortgage vs. investing more for retirement. This question is tricky because the answer can vary depending on which stage of life you’re in. Are you in the accumulation phase of trying to build wealth or in the distribution phase of using that wealth to generate income?
The Accumulation Phase
Senators put focus on healthcare data after hack
By Sarah Ferris; The Hill ~ Feb 06, 2015
Leaders of the Senate Health Committee are redoubling efforts to improve security of healthcare data in the wake of Thursday’s massive data breach at Anthem Inc.
Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) and ranking member Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) announced an effort Friday to examine how well healthcare companies are keeping customers’ data safe after millions of people were affected by the Anthem hack.
“Patients, hospitals, insurers — and all Americans who value the safety and privacy of their sensitive personal information — have a right to be alarmed by reports that their electronic records might be vulnerable to a cyber attack,” Alexander wrote in a statement.
11 Common Medicare Mistakes
By Kimberly Lankford; Kiplinger ~ Feb 06, 2015
1. Keeping your Part D plan choice on autopilot.
Open enrollment for Medicare Part D and Medicare Advantage plans runs from October 15 to December 7 every year, and it’s a good time to review all of your options. The cost and coverage can vary a lot from year to year—some plans boost premiums more than others, increase your share of the cost of your drugs, add new hurdles before covering your medications, or require you to go to certain pharmacies to get the best rates. And if you’ve been prescribed new medications or your drugs have gone generic over the past year, a different plan may now be a better deal for you.
FCC Not Scared Of AT&T’s Plan To Sue Over New Neutrality Rules
By Chris Morran; Consumerist ~ Feb 06, 2015
Earlier this week, FCC Chair Tom Wheeler confirmed his intention to ask his fellow commissioners to reclassify broadband as a telecommunications service, which would give the FCC more authority to regulate it and prohibit anti-consumer practices like throttling and blocking of data. AT&T is already gearing up for a suit to stop this change, but the FCC is apparently not terribly worried.
Medicare to pay for lung cancer screenings
By Elise Viebeck; The Hill ~ Feb 05, 2015
Medicare is moving to cover lung cancer screenings for older people who have a history of smoking at least one pack of cigarettes per day.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) had previously announced its decision to provide the CT scan coverage in November. The agency issued its final national coverage determination on Thursday, prompting praise from advocates who said thousands of lives would be saved.
“This is the first time that Medicare has covered lung cancer screening,” said CMS Chief Medical Officer Dr. Patrick Conway in a statement. “This is an important new Medicare preventive benefit since lung cancer is the third most common cancer and the leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States.”

