How Do Government-regulated Retirement
Plans Benefits Differ from Regular
Savings Benefits?
by Shane Flait (2010)
Government-regulated
retirement savings plans such as IRAs
and 401(k)s are often called ‘qualified
plans’ for short. The have a specific
taxation scheme that’s not based on the
investments you put into these ‘plans’.
The taxation of your regular savings or
investments depends on the nature (or
type) of the investment itself. In this
article, I compare these two in terms
their taxation benefits.
I’ll distinguish
between qualified plan savings and
regular investment savings by calling
the former ‘QP-taxed savings’ and the
latter ‘Investment-taxed saving’
By regular savings,
here, refers to the money you’ve earned,
been gifted, or inherited into and then
invested by as in savings accounts,
bonds, stocks, funds, or real estate.
The taxation associated with these
savings is dependent only on the type of
investment and its earnings.
QP-taxed savings
rules
The
defined-contribution qualified plans
offered by your company like 401(k),
503(b) and your personal Individual
Retirement Arrangement (IRA) are simply
accounts that must follow a specific tax
scheme. Their contributions can only
come from your working income in the
year of contribution. These
contributions are annually limited –
depending on the plan.
There are two types
of plans:
·
tax-deductible contribution plans and
·
non
tax-deductible plans (referred to as
Roth plans).
Tax-deductible plans
allow you to contribute work income and
deduct that amount from your taxable
income. Your earnings grow tax-deferred
but everything you withdraw will be
subject to income tax rates. Early
(before 59½) withdrawals are penalized
too and you must make required
distributions (MRDs) after turning 70½.
Non-deductible (Roth)
plans allow you to contribute similarly
but without a tax deduction. So it’s
harder to contribute as much as you can
to the deductible plans. But your
earnings and future withdrawals are all
tax free. Early withdrawals are
penalized but there are no MRDs.
Some company
qualified plans will match some of your
own contributions to your employee
qualified plan.
It doesn’t matter
what type of investment you choose to
invest your ‘qualified plan’ money in.
it’s all treated the same and taxed as
explained above. The ‘advertised’
benefit of these plans is really in the
tax scheme.
These benefits are
the deductible contributions,
tax-deferred or tax-free growth, and tax
free withdrawals depending on which of
the two plan types you have. A
disbenefit is the being taxed at
ordinary income rates when you withdraw
from your deductible plan. There’s no
tax benefit provision for any investment
losses you suffer within the plans.
Investment-taxed
saving rules
You can contribute as
much as you want and from any source –
like inheritance or gifts. These
contributions have already been taxed
and become the tax-basis of your
investment –which will never be taxed.
The taxation scheme
for your regular savings is based on the
investment type you use.
Income-generating investments like
savings accounts and bonds have their
interest earnings taxed annually as
ordinary income - as are dividends,
usually. Net real estate rental income
is also taxed yearly as income.
Gains, beyond
dividends and interest earned, in the
value of your investment are taxed only
when you sell and, then, at capital gain
tax rates - a low rate for holding more
than 1 year. You can generally deduct
the loss for investments that sell for
less than their basis.
Key considerations
when choosing to invest into ‘QP
savings’ or ‘investment savings’:
Getting a return on
your invested money – no matter where
you invest it – is the name of the game.
But the taxation scheme affects how much
you get of that return.
Investment-taxed
savings that grow by capital gains
offers a very low tax rate; expenses for
holding the investment reduce the
capital gain; and you can deduct losses;
and there’s not tax on gains until you
sell. Because of these attributes, put
growth type investments into
investment-taxed savings will give you
more return than you’d get in a QP
deductible saving plan.
QP-taxed deductible
savings help you contribute more
annually – but have RMD with withdrawals
taxed at income rates. Non deductible QP-taxed
investments are never tax and have no
RMD. But both plans protect the annual
taxation that cuts into investments with
annual earnings. So use QP-taxed plans
for those types of investments that kick
out annual earning – like interest –
that’d be taxed.
Also, since company QPs sometimes match
some of your QP contributions, you
should always contribute to them at
least to get the matching money. You
can’t go wrong if you do.
Shane Flait is a writer and educator.
See more at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com