A Slap in the Face to Millions of Boomers

Nilus Mattive

This post A Slap in the Face to Millions of Boomers appeared first on Daily Reckoning.

Earlier this week, we talked about Social Security and Medicare taxes … including how much of your income they eat up.

But just as a reminder: Social Security alone takes 12.4% of every American’s income up to a total limit of $15,921.60 in 2018.

That’s a lot of money.

Of course, many people are okay with the whole process because they expect to collect back out of the system when they retire.

There’s just one other dirty little secret that millions of Baby Boomers are now discovering the hard way…

Your Social Security benefits themselves can end up subject to income taxes.

Take a step back and think about that.

You pay into the system through dedicated taxes for several decades…

The whole purpose is funding a program that will eventually make payments back out to you…

Then, when it’s time to finally collect, the government taxes the distributions all over again!

This is absolutely crazy.

Lawmakers love the idea, of course.

Why?

Because it allows them to effectively reduce benefits being paid to millions of Americans without having to actually characterize it that way.

Indeed, I fully expect this to get worse as politicians find ways to further reduce the amount of money our ailing Social Security program hands out.

It is ALREADY being done to more and more Americans each and every year.

I suspect many new retirees were shocked to find that out as they completed their 2017 tax returns.

Here’s how the current law works…

You could owe federal income taxes on as much as 85% of the Social Security benefits you receive.

It all depends on how much “provisional income” you earn during retirement.

To figure this number out, you add up your adjusted gross income (not including S.S. payments), additional tax-exempt interest you’ll collect, plus half of your S.S. benefits.

If you file a joint return:

Your benefits are tax free if your provisional income is less than $32,000…
No more than half your benefits can be taxed if your provisional income is between $32,000 and $44,000…
And if your provisional income exceeds $44,000, it’s almost certain that 85% of your benefits will be taxed.

There are several things to note here:

First, if you file single or head of household, these thresholds go DOWN significantly — i.e. taxation begins at provisional income of $25,000.

Second, in that middle range the actual methodology and exact amounts get tricky but the end result is that you will likely owe a good amount of money back to Uncle Sam.

Third, these thresholds have NOT been getting readjusted for inflation!

I can’t stress the last point enough.

These numbers were originally established back in 1984.

It is now 34 years later and they haven’t been adjusted. And as you know, $32,000 a year isn’t all that much money these days.

So what was initially designed to target a small segment of the population now blankets a large swath.

The lack of inflation adjustment is the primary reason more and more retirees are getting snagged every year.

Just consider:

The Congressional Budget Office said …read more

Source:: Daily Reckoning feed

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