How You can Receive Spousal or Divorced Benefits as a Social Security Recipient
More and more retirees are boosting their overall Social Security benefits each month, even if they never worked a day in their life. Individuals who are 62 years old or more, or are the parent of a qualifying child, with a current or former spouse currently claiming retirement benefits, may be eligible to receive spousal… Continue reading How You can Receive Spousal or Divorced Benefits as a Social Security Recipient
Clearance of Agencies for 10-Year Temporary Stem Jobs by OPM
At the current timeline, 2034 is the expected end date for scheduled survivors and retirement benefits. In this year, the reserves will be…
Turning TSP Distributions into an Annuity
The least-used option for withdrawals from a Thrift Savings Plan is annuities, although payments …
What Will Be The Impact Of A High COLA Increase?
Millions of active and retired federal employees care about the size of the federal pay raise, inflation, and Cost-Of-Living Adjustme…
The White House has formalized a 4.6% pay increase for federal employees in 2023
In a letter addressed to congressional leaders on Wednesday, the White House publicly revealed intentions to give civilian government employees a 4.6% pay boost in 2023.
The 4.6% increase is the same amount recommended by the Whit…