What are 'Deemed' Salaries, in the FERS Annuity Supplement
What are "Deemed" Salaries, in the FERS Annuity Supplement?
By Robert F. Benson
Thursday, April 22, 2010
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Before his recent retirement, Robert Benson served 35 years in various Federal agencies, as both a management analyst and IT specialist. He is a graduate of Northwestern University and developed the software at fedbens.us and and fedretire.us.
In calculating a FERS annuity supplement, you will find some years in which a retiree was not in pay status for the entire year. When this happens, the retiree's salary for the entire year must, by law, be "deemed," or legally fabricated. How is this done? Here is an explanation.
For example, the employee may have started a Federal career in March of 1988 or may have resigned in September of 1990 and returned in April of 1991. In the first case, the salary for 1988 would need to be deemed, and in the second, salaries for both 1990 and 1991 would require deeming. Now, how does one deem a salary?
Take the employee's salary for his first, full year of FERS employment, not to exceed the Social Security maximum for the year. Divide this salary by the Social Security "average total wages" (ATW) for the year. The final step in arriving at the deemed salary is to multiply the ATW for the deemed year by this factor.
Here is an example.
In 1985—his first, full calendar year as a FERS employee—Joe made $21,429. Average total wages for 1985 were $16,822.51. Divide 21,429 by 16,822.51 and the result— 1.27383—is the factor you will use for deeming salary in any year where Joe was not in payroll status for the entire year.
Joe took 7 months LWOP (leave without pay) in 1995, when the average total wage was $24,705.66. So, for 1995, multiply 24,705.66 by 1.27383 in order to determine Joe's deemed salary for the year: $31,471 (rounded).
There are several more steps to calculating the supplement.
1. You must list salaries – deemed or actual – for all years beginning with the year the employee turned 22 and ending with the year prior to his retirement.
2. Adjust each salary for inflation, so they are comparable to the present.This is done by multiplying each salary by an index factor (from Social Security) for the individual year.
3. Delete the five lowest salaries.
4. Total the remaining salaries and divide by (number of years x 12). The result is called the Average Indexed Monthly Earnings, or AIME.
5. Apply the three-tier formula Social Security uses to arrive at the Primary Insurance Amount, or PIA, which is for full retirement age.
6. Reduce the PIA in accordance with the retiree's age.
7. Divide the result by 40 and multiply by the number of years of FERS service, rounded to the nearest whole number. The result is the employee's annuity supplement.
Details of the above procedure may be found in chapter 51 of the CSRS and FERS Handbook, at retire/pubs/handbook/C051.pdf
Is it any wonder that Reg Jones, benefits columnist for the Federal Times, said "(T)he formula for calculating the SRS (special retirement supplement) is too complicated for mere mortals to execute"?
To save time, you might want to go to fedbens.us and click #9 on the menu. If you have the necessary personal information, this software will calculate the exact amount of the supplement in just three minutes.
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