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Retirement Planning

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A lump-sum rollover into an IRA or an annuity. Personal Pension Plans ... 3. Establish a ROTH IRA account to obtain permanent tax avoidance of investment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Retirement Planning


1
Retirement Planning
  • Josephine Turner, Ph.D.,CFP

2
Living too Long
  • Remember one of the longevity risks is living too
    long outliving ones wealth.
  • This risk can be addressed through an appropriate
    investment program channeled through one or more
    retirement plans at work or set up independently.

3
Programs
  • Fortunately, congress has provided significant
    tax sheltering mechanism which make this task
    easier.

4
Misconceptions About Retirement Planning
  • My expenses will drop when I retire.
  • My retirement will only last 15 years.
  • I can depend on Social Security and my company
    pension to pay for my basic living expenses.

5
Misconceptions continued
  • My pension amount will keep pace with inflation.
  • Theres plenty of time for me to start saving for
    retirement.
  • Saving just a little bit wont help.

6
The Importance of Starting Early
  • To take advantage of the time value of money.

7
Compare
  • If from age 25 to 65 you invest 300 a month(at
    9) at age 65 you will have 1.4 million in your
    retirement fund.
  • Wait ten years until age 35 to start and you will
    have about 550,000.
  • Wait twenty years until age 45 and youll only
    have 201,000 at age 65.

8
Why Think About Retirement Planning Now?
  • People are spending more years (16-20) in
    retirement.
  • A private pension and Social Security are most
    often insufficient to cover the cost of living.
  • Inflation may diminish the purchasing power of
    your retirement savings.

9
Review Your Retirement Assets
  • Housing
  • If owned, probably your biggest single asset.
  • If large equity, reverse annuity mortgage.

10
Retirement Assets
  • Life insurance cash value may be converted into
    an annuity.
  • Other investments such as stocks, bonds and
    mutual funds.
  • Assets after divorce.
  • Pension benefits are considered a marital asset
    to be divided.

11
Estimated Retirement Living Expenses
  • Spending patterns will change
  • Some expenses may go down or stop.
  • Work expenses gas, lunches out.
  • Clothing expenses fewer and more casual.
  • Housing expenses-house may be paid off, but taxes
    and insurance may go up.
  • Federal income taxes will probably be lower.

12
Estimated Retirement Living Expenses (continued)
  • Other expenses may go up
  • Life and health insurance unless your employer
    continues to pay them.
  • Medical expenses increase with age.
  • Expenses for leisure activities.
  • Gifts and contributions.

13
Inflation
  • Inflation will raise the amount you need to cover
    your expenses over your probable 16-20 years in
    retirement.

14
How an Average Older (65) Household Spends its
Money
  • Housing 32.5
  • Transportation 16.3
  • Food 15.4
  • Medical 11.3
  • Insurance Other 7.7
  • Clothing 6.2
  • Contributions 5.7
  • Entertainment 4.9

15
Planning Your Retirement Housing
  • Think about where you want to live.
  • Consider the cost of living and taxes.
  • Type of housing as needs change.
  • Staying in present home is what most people
    prefer.
  • Universal design is a home built to allow for
    potential physical limitations.
  • If not built using universal design, home may
    need to be retrofitted.
  • Continuing care retirement community provide
    increasing levels of care.

16
Avoid Retirement Housing Traps
  • If you plan to move when you retire
  • Write the local Chamber of Commerce to learn
    about taxes and the economic profile.
  • Check on state income and sales taxes and taxes
    on pension income.
  • Subscribe to a local Sunday paper.
  • Estimate what your utility costs would be in the
    area.
  • Rent for awhile instead of buying immediately.

17
Planning Your Retirement Income
  • Social Security
  • Most widely used source of retirement income,
    covering 95-97 of U.S. workers.
  • Meant to be part of your retirement income, but
    not the sole source.
  • Check the Earnings Benefits statement you
    receive each year.
  • Full retirement benefits at age 65 to age 67,
    depending on the year you were born.

18
Planning Your Retirement Income (continued)
  • Social Security (continued)
  • Up to 85 of your benefit may be subject to
    federal income tax depending on your other
    sources of income, such as interest income.
  • Cost of living adjustment (COLA) each year.
  • Spouses benefit ½ workers benefit.
  • Workers confidence in Social Security paying
    them benefits when they retire is declining.

19
Retirement Income
  • Sources of Retirement Income
  • Investments 34
  • Salary and earnings 24
  • Social Security 22
  • Employer Retirement Plans 18
  • Miscellaneous 2

20
Qualified Plans
  • Allow for tax-sheltering of
  • the funds placed into the plan each year. This
    lowers your taxable income and allows you to
    afford higher deposits.
  • the income earned off the funds in the plan, if
    they are reinvested.
  • Not all qualified plans have the first benefit
    but all will have the second.
  • The taxes will be paid when the funds are
    withdrawn (except for Roth IRAs which are not
    tax deferred)

21
Employer-Sponsored Retirement Plans
  • The Employee Retirement Income Security Act
    (ERISA) governs but does not require employer
    sponsored plans.
  • ERISA governs the rules for who must be allowed
    to participate in the plan.
  • ERISA governs your irrevocable rights to
    ultimately receive the employer paid portion of
    the plan this is called vesting.

22
Vesting
  • Vesting means you have worked for an employer
    long enough (3 to 5 years) to get a pension
    benefit, even if you take a position with another
    employer.
  • Portability allows you to carry earned benefits
    from one employers pension plan to anothers
    when you change jobs.

23
Vesting Means
  • When you leave a job you can
  • cash in your pension
  • have the employer keep the funds so you will get
    a future pension from them when you retire
  • or take the funds to invest in a pension with
    your new employer (if your pension is portable)

24
Vesting (continued)
  • Cliff vesting provides 100 vesting after 5
    years.
  • Graduated vesting calls for at least 20 vesting
    after 3 years with 100 vesting at year 7.
  • Note The money you put in a pension plan is
    always 100 vested.

25
Defined Benefit Plans
  • These are the traditional plans where your
    benefit might be pegged to some percentage of
    your income such as 2 of the average of your
    last 5 years worked for the firm the number of
    years that you worked for the firm. Example You
    work 30 years for the firm and will receive 60
    of your average pay for the last 5 years.

26
Defined Benefit Plans
  • Under ERISA all plans must be funded.
  • Benefits might be reduced for social security
    benefits and for early retirement.

27
Defined Contribution Plans
  • The level of benefits is unknown but you do know
    how much is going into the plan each year based
    on employer and/or employee contributions.
  • An account is set up in each employees name and
    once vested cannot be taken away. It may even be
    portable.

28
Basic Defined-Contribution Plans
  • 401(k), 403(b) and 457 salary-reduction plans.
  • You have several investment options from which
    you must decide i.e. they are self-managed.

29
Examples of Defined Contribution Plans
  • ESOPs are employee stock-ownership plan where the
    funds are invested in the stock of the employing
    company.
  • Profit-sharing plans peg the s contributed by
    the employer to the profits of the firm. Often
    these are 100 ESOPs or a portion over some
    maximum must be put in the in the ESOP.

30
Methods of Payout from Retirement Plans
  • Disability benefits to the worker allows early
    withdrawal without penalty
  • Survivors benefits allow survivors of the worker
    to receive benefits prior to or during the
    survivors (the spouses) retirement.
  • Stream of payments (withdrawals) during
    retirement for the worker (and spouse)
  • A lump-sum rollover into an IRA or an annuity

31
Personal Pension Plans
  • Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) can be
    funded annually (3000 maximum beginning in 2002)
    or as a rollover IRA from an employer-sponsored
    plan.

32
Personal Pension Plans
  • Deposits can be tax-sheltered if
  • You are not an active participant in an
    employer-sponsored plan OR
  • Your income is below certain thresholds.
  • Non-deductible IRAs do shelter the income from
    the investment dont mix deductible and
    non-deductible IRAs in the same account.

33
Roth IRAs
  • Deposits cannot be used to reduce taxable income
    and can be withdrawn tax free because the taxes
    were already paid.
  • Earnings off the account are PERMANENTLY
    non-taxable if
  • Money has been in the account 5 years
  • withdrawn after age 59 1/2
  • - earlier withdrawal for certain educational or
    housing expenditures.

34
SEP-IRAs
  • Used by small business owners to set up an
    employer-sponsored plan for themselves and to
    contribute to IRAs for their employees.

35
Keogh Plans
  • Allow contributions from self-employment income
    even for those with employment income who
    participate in an employer-sponsored plan.
  • Example you have a full time job but have your
    own consulting firm on the side. You can set up
    a Keogh Plan to cover your side business.

36
Basic Rules
  • Withdrawals prior to age 59 ½ are subject to
    penalties. (10 of amount withdrawn) plus taxes.
  • Earlier withdrawals (age 55) are allowed but only
    if at a level that will deplete the fund over
    ones normal life expectancy
  • Larger early withdrawals are subject to a 20
    income tax withholding note if you are rolling
    over an IRA use a trustee-to-trustee rollover for
    transfers among plans.
  • Withdrawals must begin by age 70 ½ (for all but
    ROTH IRAs) at a rate to deplete the fund over
    your life expectancy.

37
Annuities
  • Sold by insurance companies are basically the
    opposite of life insurance insure against living
    too long.
  • A contract with an insurance company that agrees
    to make payments to you over a specified period
    of time or for life.

38
Annuities
  • The most basic form has a fixed rate of return
    and pays until the annuitant dies.
  • Variations include
  • Form of payment of premium
  • Variable vs. fixed returns
  • Guaranteed payment periods
  • Survivor benefits
  • Accumulated earnings are tax-deferred deposits
    (premiums paid) in, may or may not be deferred.

39
Social Security Retirement Benefits
  • You establish an account by paying FICA taxes
  • FICA retirement tax is paid on income up to the
    maximum taxable yearly earnings
  • You can earn up to four credits per year.
  • 40 credits are necessary to be eligible for
    retirement benefits
  • Benefits are based on lifetime earnings and since
    there is a maximum on earnings taxed there is a
    maximum on benefits.

40
Collecting Social Security Retirement Benefits
  • Currently, retirees get 100 percent of their
    basic benefit if they retire at age 65 it is age
    67 for those born after 1955.
  • Benefits are reduced for earlier withdrawals and
    increased for later taking of benefits age 62 is
    earliest.
  • You can still be working and collect benefits
    but they may be taxed if income is too high.
  • Dependents can collect benefits off of your
    account spouses get ½ or their own whichever is
    higher.

41
Retirement Planning Strategies
  • Accumulate investment assets over time
  • 1. At a minimum, contribute enough to an
    employers plan to obtain the maximum employer
    match.
  • 2. Max out on any available employment based
    opportunities for tax sheltering both
    contributions and investment earnings 401(k),
    403(b) or Keogh.
  • 3. Establish a ROTH IRA account to obtain
    permanent tax avoidance of investment
    gainsespecially pre-age 40.
  • 4. Supplement with other opportunities that tax
    shelter only the investment earnings.
  • 5. Saving 12-14 of gross income per year (inc.
    employer contributions) over ones working life
    will establish a sufficient fund to live at the
    same level of living for 25 years in retirement.

42
For more information
  • Contact benefits office where you work.
  • Social Security Administration www.ssa.gov.
  • Financial planner
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