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Retirement Attitude and Satisfaction: Some Influences Factor

retirement factor
Pension and annuity retirement policies were first implemented as a means to encourage older workers in employment to look for another jobs. Retirement has become a norm, the expected life of the stage, which has an institutionalized part of most modern societies. Workers expect to retire actively choose to withdraw from workforce as quickly as they are financially feasible. Once they are retired, they are expected to enjoy their life and get satisfaction with their lives. (more…)

3.11.2011

Joint Life Annuities and Double Survivor Payment

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17.07.2011

Annuity Advantages & Disadvantages of Life Annuity Choices

Annuity Advantages
As you consider the various options described in TIAA-CREF annuity, you need to remember that your situation is unique. From experience, we know that you will probably bounce ideas off people whom you know well, who know you, and certainly whom you trust. Beware, however, advice from a well-meaning friend who may have just made a decision and whose situation may be slightly or even significantly different from yours, but who feels confident that her choice is by far the best. (more…)

15.07.2011

Retirement Factors to Consider (Beside Amount of Money You Need after Retired)

In developing a retirement plan there are several factors to consider in addition to the amount you need or want to save.

1. Income Taxes.

The above discussion did not take into consideration income taxes. You might have to save more if you have to pay income taxes on all or part of your retirement benefit or your contributions. Distributions from qualified employer plans are always subject to retirement income tax. (more…)

9.06.2011

Retirement Concepts: Learning the Basics

There is an old adage that says “numbers don’t lie.” So when it comes to figuring out how much money do you need to retire, you need to understand basic math, a few retirement concepts, and some financial retirement concepts. This is where you may wish you had paid more attention to your high school math teacher. (more…)

9.06.2011

Retirement Income Planning: Social Security, Pension Income Benefit, Investments

Issues around retirement income planning are the most obvious. The traditional “three-legged stool” of retirement income planning—Social Security, pension income benefit, and income from personal savings and investments—is increasingly unsteady. Social Security faces a funding crisis in the first half of the twenty-first century because soon there may not be enough workers paying into the system to support those receiving its benefits. Social Security income lifts more than one in three older persons out of poverty—more than 60% of them women. It is by far the single most important contributor to financial security in old age in America. (more…)

22.03.2011

What is the Retirement Transition Benefit?

In this part, we describe the various distribution options that are avail able for the withdrawal of your TIAA-CREF accumulation after you have retired. The rules governing almost all of these options originate in the Code. Again, we will try our best to describe them in nontechnical terms.

The transition from a working environment to retirement poses financial as well as emotional challenges. (more…)

5.03.2011

What is TIAA-CREF Retirement Annuity ?

In later years, many employers have also turned to outside investment product providers and offer their services either parallel to or instead of the insurance products provided by TIAA-CREF. If you choose one of these investment products, you will not be contributing to an Retirement Annuity. You will have a separate account with the investment firm, but it will exist within the overarching structure of your employer’s retirement plan. Your employer may choose to allocate all matches to an accumulation in a TIAA-CREF Retirement Annuity, or it may choose to contribute the match to your account with the alternative investment provider. Again, this is depends on how your employer has constructed the plan. (more…)

4.03.2011

Early Retirement Incentive Plans (ERIPs) for Employee & Workers

Early Retirement Incentive Plans extend the benefits offered to workers or give additional financial inducements that motivate employees to retire prior to the age or time they otherwise would retire. Early retirement incentive plans first appeared on the employee benefit landscape in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The nation was struggling with “stagflation,” and many firms sought to reduce their labor costs without resorting to layoffs. At the same time, the long-term trend toward earlier retirements was proceeding unabated. Many workers expressed a desire to enjoy the “leisure” that could be secured through the early retirement provisions of many companies’ defined benefit plans. (more…)

9.02.2011

What are a Group Retirement Account and Group Supplemental Retirement Account ?

The Group Retirement Account (or “GRA”) and the Group Supplemental Retirement Account (or “GSRA”) resemble the Retirement Annuity account and the Supplemental Retirement Annuity account in many respects. There are, however, some fundamental differences between the group accounts and their nongroup counterparts.

Both the RA and the Group Retirement Account are contracts with TIAA-CREF. (more…)

2.02.2011
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