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

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

Pensions and Qualified Plans: Defined Benefit Plans or Defined Contribution Plans

Approximately one-fifth (20 percent) of post retirement income sources today comes from qualified retirement plan assets. Within 20 years, that number will increase to just under one-third (30 percent) of post retirement income. These are broadly defined as assets on which you have not yet paid retirement income taxes, though there is one exception in the Roth IRA. (more…)

24.12.2010

Creating Retirement Income and Their Taxes

One of the most important planning decisions you’ll make is how to best generate income for your retirement. Different sources of income have different characteristics and potentially different pension tax consequences. It’s very important to be wise in establishing and maintaining your post retirement cash flow. Here are the various types of income and their representative taxation: (more…)

5.09.2010

Integrating Retirement Accounts with Other Assets

retirement accounts assets
Once you identify your personal financial retirement profile, you can move to the next level on the financial planning for retirement. Many people accumulate different types of property for pension that can be used for retirement. The type of property one owns and its tax characteristics can be important in creating an overall retirement strategy that fits well into Level III of the financial pyramid. Let’s take a look at how to create efficiency and diversification in an integrated program. (more…)

4.02.2010

Who Are “Older” Workers in Today’s Economy?

Older Workers
The lower age boundary defining “older worker” seems to depend on the context. Much of the retirement literature uses age 65 and older to define this category, a choice that reflects the salience of age 65 in previously enforced policies of mandatory retirement and entitlement for full Social Security benefits, as well as the general usage of the 18-to-64 age range in defining the “prime age” workforce. Within this context, “older worker” referred to someone whose continued attachment to the labor force ran counter to the normative pattern of retirement; by working beyond the “normal” retirement age of 65, these workers were considered categorically different from those who eschewed the option of “early” retirement. (more…)

29.01.2010

Types of Qualified Retirement Plans

types of qualified retirement plans
Retirement plans come in all shapes and sizes, but most plans fall into a few broad types. The following is a list of the major categories. I discuss the individual plans in detail later in the book.

Defined Benefit Plans

A defined benefit plan is a retirement arrangement in which your employer guarantees the benefit. (more…)

30.07.2009