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Lecture 25 401(k) and Other Tax Deductible Salary Savings Plans. Tax treatment Illustration of the tax deferral advantage Basic characteristics of 401(k) plans Actual Deferral Percentage test SIMPLE/IRAs 403(b) plans 457 plans . Tax Treatment.
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Lecture 25401(k) and Other Tax Deductible Salary Savings Plans • Tax treatment • Illustration of the tax deferral advantage • Basic characteristics of 401(k) plans • Actual Deferral Percentage test • SIMPLE/IRAs • 403(b) plans • 457 plans
Tax Treatment • Employees elect whether to participate and how much to contribute to the plan • Employee contributions reduce taxable income for income tax purposes, but not for Social Security taxes • Investment income is not currently taxable • Employee is taxed when the funds are withdrawn from the plan • Some plan withdrawals are eligible for income averaging
Illustration of the Tax Deferral Advantage Assumptions: $2000 per year in contributions for 40 years Tax rates: 28% while working 15% after retirement Interest rate: 8% (5.76% after-tax) Annuity rate: $9.50 per $1 annual income Calculations: 401(k): $2000 per year at 8% Other: $1440 per year at 5.76%
Illustration of the Tax Deferral Advantage (cont.) Accumulations*: 401(k) $559,562 Other $221,941 Annual retirement income: 401(k) $50,066 (559,626/9.5)x.85 Other $23,362 (221,941/9.5) *Annuity due factor: [(1+i)n+1 - (1+i)]/ i For n = 40 and i = .08: 279.781 For n = 40 and i = .0576: 154.126
Basic Characteristics of 401(k) Plans • Private employers • Maximum contribution: • 15% of compensation subject to $9500 (indexed) maximum • Voluntary participation • Matching contributions allowed • Vesting • Employee contributions: immediate • Employer contributions: standard rules • Distribution restrictions
Actual Deferral Percentage Tests A qualified 401(k) plan must meet one of the following two tests: 1 ADP for HCE must not be more than 125% of the ADP for non-HCE 2 ADP for HCE must not exceed the lesser of: a) 200% of the ADP for non-HCE b) ADP for non-HCE + 2%
ADP Test Example • 10 employees in company • A and B earn $100,000 per year (HCEs) • A contributes 10% • B contributes 6% • ADP of HCE = 8% • other 8 are non-HCEs • 4 of non-HCE contribute 6% • other 4 do not participate • ADP of non-HCE = 3% • Plan fails, since ADP of HCE cannot exceed: • Test 1: 3.75% • Test 2: Lesser of a) 6% b) 5%
Designing a Plan to Meet the ADP Tests • Mandatory deferral • Limiting the deferral by the HCE • Encouraging non-HCE to participate
SIMPLE/IRAs(Savings Incentive Math Plans for Employers) • Eligibilty • Fewer than 100 employees • No qualified plan • Employer contributes to employees’ IRA • Employees contribute up to $6,000 to IRA • Employer matching contributions • Advantages • Simple • Portable • Disadvantages • Benefits may not be adequate • Lower limits than 401(k)
403(b) Tax-Deferred Annuity Plans • Similar to 401(k) plans • Eligible employers • Tax exempt under section 501(c)(3) • Educational organization • Limits on contributions • 403(b) Annual exclusion allowance • 20% of compensation multiplied by • Total years of service minus • Amounts contributed in prior years • 415 annual additions limit and catch-up • 25% of compensation or $30,000 • Salary reduction limitation • $9,500 • Salary reduction catch-up (if 15 years of service)
Section 457 Plans • Similar to 401(k) plans • Eligible employers • Government • Limitations • Lessor of: • $7500 (indexed) or • 1/3rd compensation