The Week (US)

What the experts say

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A bad year to turn 60

“Anyone turning 60 this year could face a lifelong reduction in Social Security benefits,” said Michael Hiltzik in the Los Angeles Times. Wage indexing is used to calculate a person’s benefits, taking into account average monthly earnings over the course of a career. That then gets adjusted by an economy-wide “average wage index,” which helps the government account for inflation. In general, the average wage index has been beneficial to retirees— “wages tend to rise faster than prices by about 1 percent a year.” But this year, wages are expected to take as much as a 15 percent hit as a result of the monthslong economic lockdown. Workers who turned 60 in 2009 faced a similar shortfall that “may have come to $100 a month or more.” This year’s impact could be three times as costly.

Do you still need your miles?

“It’s time to decide what to do with your airline credit cards,” said Scott McCartney in The Wall Street Journal. With fewer people traveling, cards from American Express and Chase that were once popular for early-boarding benefits and mileage are now adding “bonuses for spending at grocery stores and restaurant­s” to keep people invested. But if you’re not planning on traveling soon and you’re carrying a “basic airline-related credit card—which typically costs about $100 a year”—it’s smart to cancel now. “If you wait two years, you can go back to them with big sign-up bonuses.” If you do hang tight, American Airlines’ co-branded cards have temporaril­y brought back “a cherished perk” through December: credit-card spending counts toward lifetime elite status.

Little guidance on checks for dead

The federal government sent more than $1.4 billion in stimulus payments to dead people, said Jason Silverstei­n in CBSNews.com. The finding came from the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office, the agency that’s auditing “the nearly $3 trillion in coronaviru­s relief approved by Congress in March.” By the end of May, the government had sent direct payments of $1,200 for individual­s and $2,400 for couples to roughly 160 million people. But the Treasury Department and its distributi­on service “do not have full access to death records maintained by the Social Security Administra­tion and used by the IRS,” so nearly 1.1 million payments went “to people who were deceased.” The IRS says “these payments have to be returned, but it’s not currently planning to notify more recipients on how to do so.”

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