• 401k plan
  • living inretirement
  • retirement wealth
  • retirement planning

Termination of Employee Benefit Plan

A company may terminate an employee benefit plan. However, a plan qualified for favorable tax treatment under the Internal Revenue Code must provide that, in effect, each affected participant becomes fully vested in his accrued benefit at the time of termination. ERISA also provides that, for defined benefit plans, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) must be notified. (more…)

7.03.2011

Saving for Retirement: Managing Income and Expenses After Retire

Saving for Retirement
If we boil things down to a simple two-part equation, retirement planning is all about managing inflows (income) during your earning years and outflows (expenses) during your retirement years. Of course, retirement means different things to different people at different points in their lives. Rather than a static state, retirement is a dynamic state, changing with life events, financial events, and even your own education as you learn more about concepts and products. The more information you absorb, the more comfortable you feel in being an active participant in the retirement planning process. Your plan for accumulating assets for retirement has to take all of this into account and be flexible enough to adapt to all kinds of changes. (more…)

23.02.2011

What is a Retirement Annuity? | Employer’s Retirement Plan

Like the peculiar behavior of the dog in the night in the Sherlock Holmes story “Silver Blaze,” one of the obvious but overlooked clues about the insurance orientation of TIAA-CREF appears in the names of the accounts that are given to the various accumulation alternatives available to you. Each account is labeled an “annuity,” and each contribution is called a “premium.” To avoid confusion you should note that what TIAA-CREF labels as an “account,” you probably would call an investment choice or fund.

Stripped to the basics, your Retirement Annuity (or “Retirement Annuity”) boils down to an accumulation agreement between you and TIAA-CREF. (more…)

4.01.2011

Defined Contribution Scheme: What Type of Pension Plan Best for Employee?

Having decided that a corporation can afford and should offer some type of employee benefits plan, the next step is to determine what type of plan or plans the company should adopt.

Employee benefit plans that provide some form of deferred benefits (that is, benefits deferred until after the employee retires) fall into two broad categories. A defined contribution pension plans provides an individual account for each participant and benefits are based upon the amount contributed by the company, or by the company and the employee, to that account, together with the investment results of the account. (more…)

1.11.2010

2010 Roth IRA Contribution Limits

2010 roth IRA
A Roth IRA is the reverse of the traditional IRA, though limits on the amounts you’re allowed to contribute are identical. Unlike with a traditional IRA, you can’t deduct your contribution on your income taxes. However, your money in a Roth IRA grows income tax free and you can withdraw from it income tax free, which for many people can prove an even better deal. (more…)

16.03.2010

How to Pay for Retirement | Growth of Individual Retirement Accounts

individual retirement account
Americans are increasingly become aware and responsible for their retirement wealth. Many of us are know that the prospect of living with social security income and a employer pension plan is reduced dramatically and not attractive. More and more pensioners and retirees are less put trust on traditional sources of income; saving for retirement and work part time are seen to be more attractive. But the condition for future pensioners and retirees will be getting worsened. Given the desire to build a large nest egg for retirement was the need to build a replacement income. (more…)

6.01.2010

Risk of Inadequate Savings & Retiring Earlier Than Planned

risk savings retire earlier
It is hard fact that the best-designed 401k plan in the most prosperous investment condition can’t have an enough income for retirement, if the person is not contributing a significant amount to the plan regularly. This problem can be as result as no continuous access to 401k plan, financial instability to contribute due to low salary, other financial priority in life, family and life needs, (more…)

9.12.2009

Avoid 401k Contribution Mistakes: Failure to Participate and Contribute 401k

contribute 401k
If you are an employee and your employer has established a 401k plan, it is a mistake to not participate and not contribute as much as possible. When you put your money investing in a 401k, you wish to get your money’s deserving for your investment. Your main goal is by the time your retirement come so that you can retire comfortably. (more…)

9.10.2009

Top 10 Retirement Planning Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

avoid retirement planning mistakes
Another old adage says that we should learn from the mistakes of others. When it comes to retirement planning, there are many legal, tax, and retirement saving mistakes you can make as a business owner, retirement plan trustee, or plan participant. (more…)

9.09.2009

Employer Sponsored Retirement Plans as Source of Income

retirement income
Analyses of retirement income adequacy and retirement income planning often focus on people age 65 and over because the overwhelming majority of workers have retired by this age. Thus it is possible to look at the sources and level of income available to people over 65 to get some sense of the standards of living that are achievable in retirement.

An elderly unit is a family in which at least one person is 65 years of age or older. 44 percent of the elderly units were receiving some pension income. (more…)

3.04.2009
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