Once you elect to buy back, the 7% CI stops on the amount you are buying back (either all, or whatever % you decide to buy back). But the 7% CI is replaced the month following the date of your election with 4% CI on the amount you still owe on your buy back. I have previously given estimates of my buy back as to how it works. That's why my buy back costs $223 K in interest alone. The 7% CI on the 35 calender years I bought back, plus the 20 years of interest on the amount still outstanding after the transfer of my RRSP's equals $223 K in interest costs.
The 7% CI is applied to every penny you are buying back from the earlest calender year of service to a maximum of 35 calender years (1973). If you bought back $1000 from 1988, you pay 7% CI on that $1000 from 1988 to the date of election, then 30 days latter, if you had not paid that $1000 plus accumulated interest, you start paying 4% CI on the $1000 and accumulated interest until it is paid.
Do not forget, that if you decide not to buy back all of your pension, and say decide to buy back 50%, that 50% is based on the total cost as if you bought all of it back. You are still paying the the cost of the entire pension buy back, all the 7% CI, all the years of service, then they take 50% of that total cost figure. You cannot pick and choose what years of service to buy back: all or a % of all.
Hope that answers your questions. If not ask away. But, to be sure, they are really screwing us on buy back, and the head shed let them get away with it. I am attempting to get "them" to see the light.
Posted previously.
Re: Reserve Pension
« Reply #514 on: January 24, 2008, 18:10:32 »
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following is from the CFSA Regulations.
Manner of Payment for Elective Pensionable Service
14. (1) If, under paragraph 9(1)(b) of the Act, a contributor — other than a contributor who is a member of the reserve force or, in respect of a top-up election under section 14.2, a contributor who was a member of the reserve force — has exercised an option to pay in instalments for pensionable service, those payments shall be made by reservation from pay and allowances or otherwise, for life or for a period of years not greater than for life, and are payable in the following manner:
(a) the first instalment is due and payable on the first day of the month immediately following the month of election and succeeding instalments monthly after that time during the term corresponding to the plan of payment selected by the contributor, computed in accordance with Canadian Life Table No. 2 (1941), Males four per cent or Females four per cent, as the case may be; and
(b) the contributor may amend the plan of payment to provide for payment of the instalments still to be paid in a lump sum or by larger monthly instalments on a basis similar to that described in paragraph (a), calculated as of the date of the amendment.
The following is from the RFP Regulations.
Instalments
18. (1) The instalments shall be payable in equal amounts that may not be less than $5.00, except the last one, and be calculated using the mortality rates set out in the Complete life table, Canada, 1995-97, published by Statistics Canada, and interest at four per cent compounded annually.
When payable (2) he instalments shall be payable on the first day of each month following the month of the election until the earlier of
(a) the end of the period chosen by the participant ending before the later of 20 years and the participant's 65th birthday, and
(b) the death of the participant.
See the difference? When you make your election, the 7% CI on the buy back stops, and is replaced with 4% CI, plus a Mortality Charge (life insurance) on the amount you owe. For example, say you elected in Apr, made a lump sum payment of $200,000, still owe $100,000. You will be charged 4% CI on that $100,000 commencing May. Plus the Mortality Charge. If you took the maximum 20 year repayment option, that $100,000 grows to $175,000 due to the 4% CI. Plus the Mortality Charge of course, which will add thousands more depending on your age.
Personally I am already paying 54% of the buy back in 7% CI costs. Add another $100K plus, plus, plus, and I am regioning over a quarter of a million dollars in interest alone. My personal problem. Just to keep you informed of what is really going on. I still do not have, after 6 months, all the figures.
What does the reserve community on this board think of that?