Want to know the size of the next federal pay raise? Your best bet is to take $20, or the going rate, and find yourself a first-class tarot card reader. If she ...
So, after three years without a pay raise how are your 2014 finances shaping up? The answer depends on whether you are working or retired. If you are a retired federal worker, a military retiree or you get Social Security benefits, you will get a cost-of-living adjustment in January. Right now, it looks like 1.39 percent. The exact amount of the COLA will be determined by any rise — or fall — in prices for the month of September.
But if you are a still-working fed, your 2014 financial status is still a little murky. Make that very murky.
On the negative side, you can bet your health insurance premiums are going up next year. Maybe taxes too. And it is likely (can you say Syria?) that gasoline will be up as well.
So what about your 2014 pay raise? Where does that stand? To find out, you have two options:
The problem is that despite the speed and scrutiny of the 24/7 political news cycle, nobody has any idea what Congress is going to do — with the exception of taking time off.
Useful information (like the status of a possible $2 billion, 2014 pay raise) is hard to come by because the political situation is so strained and confusing. Senate Democrats will probably go along with the 1 percent pay proposal. But the House — which favors a 1.8 percent raise for uniformed military personnel — probably won’t. Stalemate.
The pay raise could also fall victim to the upcoming battle over raising the debt limit. The three-year pay freeze could be extended when/if Congress and the White House reach agreement on a short- (or long-) term continuing resolution. The CR will be necessary since Congress hasn’t approved budgets for the fiscal year that begins in October.
If Congress and the White House agree to a CR or on the debt ceiling, it could be a temporary measure that would expire in January or March of next year. It is unlikely that it would include a pay raise until the budget or borrowing issues were settled.
Checkmate.
Bottom line is nobody knows. Considering this is Washington, maybe that isn’t such a big surprise.
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
Compiled by Jack Moore
There are many terms in foreign languages that have no equivalent in English. Among them: the Hawaiin phrase Pana Poʻo, which describes the act of scratching your head to help you remember something you’ve forgotten. The Italian word culaccino describes the ring of water left on a table by a cold glass
(Source: Huffington Post)
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Mike Causey is senior correspondent for Federal News Network and writes his daily Federal Report column on federal employees’ pay, benefits and retirement.
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