Chapter 13
Retirement Savings and Deferred Compensation
© 2014 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed, or posted on a website, in whole or part.
13-2
Learning Objectives
1. Describe the tax and nontax aspects of employer-provided defined benefit plans from both the employer’s and employee’s perspective.
2. Explain and determine the tax consequences associated with employer-provided defined contribution plans, including traditional 401(k) and Roth 401(k) plans.
3. Describe the tax implications of deferred compensation from both the employer’s and employee’s perspective.
13-3
Learning Objectives
4. Determine the tax consequences of traditional and Roth Individual Retirement Accounts and explain the differences between them.
5. Describe the retirement savings options available to self-employed taxpayers and compute the limitations for deductible contributions to retirement accounts for self-employed taxpayers.
6. Compute the saver’s credit.
13-4
Employer Provided Plans
Qualified Plans Must not discriminate between employees Two main types:
Defined benefit plan Defined contribution plan
13-5
Defined Benefit Plans
Standard benefits based on fixed formula Average compensation Years of service Maximum benefit in 2013 is $205,000
Employers deduct liability as they contribute to plan Funding requirements based on actuarial
assumptions Employer not employee bears investment risk
13-6
Defined Benefit Plans
Vesting schedules 5-year cliff or 7-year graded
Distributions from defined benefit plans are taxable to employee when received. Ordinary income Early distributions subject to 10% penalty
13-7
Defined Contribution Plans
Employer specifies up-front contribution on employee’s behalf Employers typically match employee contributions Employees may contribute to plan Employees choose how to invest contributions
Alternatives depend on employer’s plan 401(k), 403(b), and 457
13-8
Defined Contribution Plans
Annual contribution limits for 2013 Employee contributions
$17,500 if not 50 years of age by year end $23,000 if at least 50 years old by year end
Employer + Employee contributions Limited to lesser of $51,000 ($56,500 if at least 50
years old at end of year) or 100% of the employee’s compensation.
13-9
Defined Contribution Plans
Vesting Employee contributions and earnings on
employee contributions Vest immediately.
Employer contributions and earnings on employer contributions Minimum vesting requirements
3-year cliff or 6-year graded schedule.
13-10
Defined Contribution Plans
13-11
Defined Contribution Plans
Distributions Distributions are ordinary income Early distributions subject to a 10% penalty
Before 59 ½ year of age if still working or Before 55 years old and separated from service
(retired)
13-12
Defined Contribution Plans Required minimum distributions
For the year in which employee reaches age 70 ½ or when the employee retires, if later (and each subsequent year) May defer first required distribution to April 1 of next year.
Subsequent distributions must be made by December 31 of current year
Based on applicable percentage of balance at end of prior year
50% penalty on undistributed portion of minimum distribution requirement.
13-13
Traditional 401k Plans
Contributions are made with before-tax dollars. Tax deductible
Distributions: Same rules as other defined contribution plans
13-14
Roth 401k Plans
Contributions made with after-tax dollars. Not tax deductible Employer contributions must go into a
traditional 401k plan (not a Roth 401k plan)
13-15
Roth 401k Plans
Qualified distributions After account open for five years and employee
has reached age 59 ½. Non-qualified distributions
Distributions of earnings are taxable and subject to 10% penalty
Distributions from contributions are not taxable Contributions divided by account balance multiplied
by amount of distribution equals distribution from contributions
13-16
Deferred Compensation
“Nonqualified plans” May discriminate Generally provided to executives or highly
compensated rather than rank and file Can be used to make employees whole when
contributions to qualified plans would be limited
Deemed investment choices Risks to employees electing to defer salary?
13-17
Deferred Compensation
Employer deducts for tax purposes when pays Compare to financial accounting
Employee includes in income when received
If paid after retirement, §162(m) limitation does not apply
13-18
Deferred Compensation
Relevant variables Employer and employee current tax rates Employer and employee future tax rates Employer’s cost of capital or discount rate Employee’s cost of capital or discount rate
13-19
Individually Managed Qualified Retirement Plans
IRAs Roth IRAs
13-20
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) For AGI deduction for contributions
Generally not allowed if participant in employer-sponsored plan unless
For single taxpayers, deduction allowed if participate in employer plan but income is below certain thresholds (2013): Lesser of $5,500 or earned income If 50 years or older at end of year limit is lesser of
$6,500 or earned income Additional $1,000 “catch-up” contribution
13-21
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) For AGI deduction for contributions
For married taxpayers deduction is allowed if participate in employer plan but income is below certain thresholds (2013): Lesser of $5,500 or earned income of both spouses
reduced by other spouse’s contributions to IRA or Roth IRA
If 50 years or older at end of year limit is lesser of $6,500 or earned income of both spouses reduced by other spouse’s contributions to IRA or Roth IRA Additional “catch-up” contribution
13-22
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) May make nondeductible contributions
Deductible + nondeductible cannot exceed $5,500 for one taxpayer (plus catch-up)
Must contribute by April 15th of subsequent year
13-23
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs)
Distributions taxed as ordinary income 10% penalty if before age 59 ½ Certain exceptions
Medical expenses, insurance premiums, first home
Same minimum distributions apply as to qualified contribution plans
nontaxable percentage = nondeductible contributions divided by balance of account
13-24
Roth IRAs
Nondeductible contributions Contributions to a Roth IRA
Same $5,500 limit ($6,500 if 50 or older at year end)
Phase-out based on AGI
13-25
Roth IRAs
Distributions from a Roth Distributions of contributions never taxed Qualified distributions of earnings from Roth not taxed
Account must be open for five years before can receive qualified distributions and Taxpayer must be at least 59 ½ to receive qualified distribution or Distributions on death of taxpayer or Taxpayer is disabled or First home purchase (limited to $10,000)
No minimum distribution requirements
13-26
Roth IRAs
Rollover from traditional to Roth Tax consequences Why roll over?
Marginal tax rates Contribution limits to Roth are effectively higher
$5,500 limit of after tax vs. before-tax dollars
13-27
Plans for Self-Employed
SEP IRA Individual 401(k)
13-28
SEP IRA
Contribution limit Lesser of (1) $51,000 or (2) 20% × (net Schedule
C income minus deduction for employer’s portion of self-employment taxes paid). Employer’s portion is 50%.
Must provide plan to employees if taxpayer has employees
13-29
Individual 401(k)
Contribution limit Lesser of (1) $51,000 or (2) 20% × (net Schedule
C income minus deduction for employer’s portion of self-employment taxes paid) + $17,500
Additional $5,500 if age 50 by year end Maximum contribution is $56,500 ($51,000 + $5,500)
13-30
Saver’s Credit
Credit for taxpayers contributing to qualified plans
Credit in addition to deduction for contribution Available to lower income taxpayers
Depends on filing status and AGI
13-31
Saver’s Credit
Top Related