Let’s
take a look.
Good Points-depending on
your individual situation.
More
time in IRAs and 401(k)s. The bill would push back the age for required minimum
distributions (RMDs) from 70½ to 72 years old. With 65,000 baby boomers
retiring daily, those who would rather not take their RMD’s and not have them
taxed and defer the distribution for two years this is a good feature. Moreover
the fund could continue to grow tax free.
Grant
part-time workers benefits. Long-term part-time employees would be able to
participate in their company’s 401(k) plans.
Boost
small-business 401(k)s. Small businesses could band together in group plans.
Annuity
adoptions.
Would allow employer-sponsored 401(k) plans to add annuities as investment
options on the menu.-this feature is favored by insurance companies as providing
annuities is a big market.
529
plans.
529 plans would be expanded to pay for expenses related to an apprenticeship or
to pay back as much as $10,000 in student loans.
Bad Points-depending on
your individual situation.
Age limits
Investors
with 401(k) plans or other tax-deferred accounts would have another year and a
half before Uncle Sam required withdrawals. Instead of taking money out at 70½,
Americans would be able to wait until they turned 72. It gives extra time to
grow your investments before you have to start taking money out of your
accounts yet take the funds out at a later date would actuarially require
larger starting distributions as the time frame for taking the would be less.
To
make up for lost tax revenue, the House bill would require Americans who
inherit an IRA to withdraw the money within 10 years of the account owner’s
death, along with paying any taxes due. Notwithstanding the surviving
spouses and minor children would be excluded. Under current law, heirs spend
down inherited IRA accounts over their lifetime, an estate-planning strategy
known as the “stretch IRA.” The SECURE Act would do away with the stretch IRA. This
is a big change and subjects the inherited IRA to income tax at a faster rate.
Apparently this was a tradeoff from a revenue perspective to allow a delay in
the RMD’s.
Moreover
from an estate planning perspective the elimination of the stretch IRA will
change the thinking of whether it is better to withdraw the IRA and have it
taxed at the (presumably) owner’s lower tax rate and pass on the net to his
heirs or maintain the fund, defer, and allow the fund to continue to grow. This
will be a new issue for estate planners to consider.
The Senate version, known as RESA, is
slightly less punitive and may instead call for a five-year payout period for
inherited IRAs over $400,000 per heir.
Other Points
The
bill would require your employer’s 401(k)-type retirement plan to allow
“permanent” part-time workers to participate. To qualify, you would need to
have worked 500 or more hours a year (but fewer than 1,000 hours) for at least
three consecutive years. There are 2,080 hours in the traditional
40-hour-a-week year.
401(k) options for
small businesses
If
House and Senate bills pass and become law, small businesses could have the
option to join group plans alongside other companies. This lowers
administration and management costs and ideally makes higher-quality plans
available to small businesses and their workers.
Current
law allows small businesses starting a new retirement plan a $500 tax credit.
The SECURE Act bill would increase the credit to as much as $5,000, and apply
for three years.
Annuity options, good
and bad
The
bill would allow 401(k) plans to add annuities as an option for employees.
The
idea is that annuities solve the problem of lifetime income for workers who
once received pensions. Annuities are insurance policies that convert
retirement savings into income. Common in pension plans, annuities to date have
not been popular in 401(k) plans.
The
House bill would repeal the so-called kiddie
tax changes beginning in 2019, although taxpayers could elect to use the
old tax rules for 2018 if they wish. This would be a welcome change for those
who were surprised by increases in tax under the new tax rules, which subjected
those children to the trust tax rates and brackets rather than using their
parents’ brackets. This is especially true for college students who received
taxable scholarships and `Gold Star’ families, those who are collecting military
survivor benefits after losing a parent.
A
final positive: The SECURE Act would allow investors early access to IRA funds
for any “qualified birth or adoption” by creating a new exception to the 10
percent penalty.
Everyone
whether beginning to save for retirement, about to retire, or in retirement
needs to periodically examine their retirement account to insure it comports
with their current needs.
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