Re: Kokumin Hoken reductions for dependents?
Posted: Mon Oct 16, 2023 7:00 am
Follow-up to my original post.
Once the tax return (Kakutei Shinkoku) filtered down to my ward office, they adjusted my Kenko hoken payments down by about Y5000 a month, my care insurance (Kaigo Hoken) by about Y2000 a month, and also my residence tax by about Y18,000 a quarter. All of which is still painful, but a definite improvement on the initial bill. This does contradict what they misinformed me in the ward office, which I mentioned above. Luckily I was pretty sure that lower income on my tax return would eventually reduce my bill, so I just nodded, went away and bided my time. Lesson of this - if in doubt get a second, then a third opinion. Then trust your own knowledge and experience if what they told you doesn't equate.
As I mentioned maybe on a different thread, my employer failed to send me my documentation in time to apply to continue on Shakai Hoken for the moment (called Nin-in Keizoku). They were actually in breach of their legal requirement to send me this document within seven days of forcibly retiring me. My union also failed to tell me about this option, which is why this was a very bitter experience. Even with the lower health insurance (Kenko Hoken) figure of around Y38,000 a month, I am still nearly Y100,000 out of pocket just for this first year as a result. (In the second year, it may work out cheaper on Kokumin Kenko Hoken). Considering that my hope had been to continue working and pay into Kosei Nenkin for another year to boost my eventual pension, this was a nasty experience.
Add to that the fact that for us oldies, even if we are out of work and have been paying unemployment insurance (Koyo Hoken) for over a quarter of a century, instead of getting a percentage of our salary for an extended period while we look for work, we just get a lump sum to cover 50 days and are sent on our merry way. And no wish to help us look for work either. I was summarily processed through a separate "oldies" track at Hello Work. They didn't seem to know what to say when I said I was wanting to work.
A further twist to this - I went to the City Hall to ask about what benefits and goodies there were for oldies like myself. Like discount travel on public transport and suchlike (coming from the UK where the Freedom Pass in London gives the over-60's free travel on ALL forms of public transport, I sort of thought I was going to be admitted to the seniors club). I was shocked to learn that the only discount is for the over-70's, and then only on Yokohama buses and the Yokohama subway. And it seems that they want to axe even this little perk, because there are getting to be more and more of us likely to make use of it. So what exactly have all my taxes been going for, all these years I've been paying them to the city? Instead I got a pretty "YokoTomo" card, which when I enquired, the nice lady explained would give me benefits like 5% off my dry cleaning bill at selected outlets. No discount at city facilities, not even a senior discount at public sports centres.
WTF! I really don't know why more seniors here don't kick up about the situation here. The public perception seems to be that Boomers are living the good life. I guess if you get a golden parachute, it would ease the pain of some of these things. But for someone who was cast out against my will and without any final payout, and finding doors to employment in Japan closed, because age, it seems like a parallel universe.
Once the tax return (Kakutei Shinkoku) filtered down to my ward office, they adjusted my Kenko hoken payments down by about Y5000 a month, my care insurance (Kaigo Hoken) by about Y2000 a month, and also my residence tax by about Y18,000 a quarter. All of which is still painful, but a definite improvement on the initial bill. This does contradict what they misinformed me in the ward office, which I mentioned above. Luckily I was pretty sure that lower income on my tax return would eventually reduce my bill, so I just nodded, went away and bided my time. Lesson of this - if in doubt get a second, then a third opinion. Then trust your own knowledge and experience if what they told you doesn't equate.
As I mentioned maybe on a different thread, my employer failed to send me my documentation in time to apply to continue on Shakai Hoken for the moment (called Nin-in Keizoku). They were actually in breach of their legal requirement to send me this document within seven days of forcibly retiring me. My union also failed to tell me about this option, which is why this was a very bitter experience. Even with the lower health insurance (Kenko Hoken) figure of around Y38,000 a month, I am still nearly Y100,000 out of pocket just for this first year as a result. (In the second year, it may work out cheaper on Kokumin Kenko Hoken). Considering that my hope had been to continue working and pay into Kosei Nenkin for another year to boost my eventual pension, this was a nasty experience.
Add to that the fact that for us oldies, even if we are out of work and have been paying unemployment insurance (Koyo Hoken) for over a quarter of a century, instead of getting a percentage of our salary for an extended period while we look for work, we just get a lump sum to cover 50 days and are sent on our merry way. And no wish to help us look for work either. I was summarily processed through a separate "oldies" track at Hello Work. They didn't seem to know what to say when I said I was wanting to work.
A further twist to this - I went to the City Hall to ask about what benefits and goodies there were for oldies like myself. Like discount travel on public transport and suchlike (coming from the UK where the Freedom Pass in London gives the over-60's free travel on ALL forms of public transport, I sort of thought I was going to be admitted to the seniors club). I was shocked to learn that the only discount is for the over-70's, and then only on Yokohama buses and the Yokohama subway. And it seems that they want to axe even this little perk, because there are getting to be more and more of us likely to make use of it. So what exactly have all my taxes been going for, all these years I've been paying them to the city? Instead I got a pretty "YokoTomo" card, which when I enquired, the nice lady explained would give me benefits like 5% off my dry cleaning bill at selected outlets. No discount at city facilities, not even a senior discount at public sports centres.
WTF! I really don't know why more seniors here don't kick up about the situation here. The public perception seems to be that Boomers are living the good life. I guess if you get a golden parachute, it would ease the pain of some of these things. But for someone who was cast out against my will and without any final payout, and finding doors to employment in Japan closed, because age, it seems like a parallel universe.