I haven't heard of it and to the best of my knowledge I'm not affected by it . At least not so far. For those reading this I live down in Yamaguchi which is considered to be the cheap area to live in Japan. I'm debt free. No house or car payment. But it really does take about 250000 yen to live and not just exist. Sorry to say, but in this country one most likely has to work till we drop. And working is a bit more healthier too. Hopefully soon I'll be back into the work force. If I'm lucky, I'll go the self-employed route.captainspoke wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 10:40 amYou probably know this, but for SS there is something called the WEP -- windfall elimination provision. What this means is that if you are getting some kind of pension in addition to SS, then your SS will be reduced to 'account for' that.japanville jojo wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 7:46 am...
Although I get American Social Security which is less than one grand a month, hopefully I can get into action soon and generate some more income.
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I'm american, but have never really worked there, and don't even qualify for the minimum SS (40 quarters), so no direct experience with this. But I have a friend here, we used to work at the same school, who has said his SS benefit is reduced due to his pension here (tho he gets 私学共済 in addition to 国民年金, so more).
WEP is focused on workers in jobs like police/fire, and some teachers (e.g., illinois, but not indiana), and so on, that do not pay into SS. Those workers can in fact qualify for their separate pension, and then by retiring/quitting early can then work another job in order to get SS. The theory is that the WEP levels the playing field, so that those who pay SS taxes are not subsidizing those who paid comparatively little. I think expats with foreign pensions just kind of got caught in this system inadvertently.
Once upon a time, maybe the 80s and before, or even the 90s, US expats could slide under the radar on this and collect SS and a foreign pension. Those days are gone.
Thanks for your post too.