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Individual Retirement Accounts -
IRA
Debt is closely tied to savings - the more you do the first,
the less you have left over for the latter. Conversely, the
more savings you have, the less you (usually) need or want to
borrow. Since you're paying out interest by borrowing, and (in
some cases) simultaneously not getting interest by saving
instead, you get a double financial whammy.
For example, instead of borrowing money by using your credit
card, you could save that same amount every month until you had
enough to buy the item you used the credit card to purchase.
Only you can decide whether having the item today is worth
paying the extra amount of money it cost in interest to own
it.
But when it goes beyond individual items, into the realm of
saving for retirement, you have a bigger issue to consider. An
IRA (Individual Retirement Account) allows you to set aside
money for your later years. That has multiple benefits and a
few risks.
When you save that money, obviously, you are not spending it.
You accumulate interest on that money saved, which compounds
over time. See one of the many online calculators to get a feel
for how compounding can help, for example, turn a few thousand
into many thousands over 30 years. You also get a tax benefit,
since by design any money put into the account represents a tax
deduction.
Instead, you are taxed on that money when you begin to use it
many years later. The theory is that you will then be at a much
lower tax rate and therefore pay a much smaller amount than you
would when it was first earned. Sometimes that theory is true
in practice, and in some smaller number of cases it's not. You
will need to make some predictions for your own case, but for
most people it's true.
There are more variations today on basic IRAs than there were
20 years ago when the idea first became a reality. But the
basics remain true. You can still put up to $2,000 per year tax
free into the account.
One variation, for example, is the popular Roth IRA. Federal
regulations allow tax-free withdrawals as long as the
contributions remain in the account for five years and you are
at least 59½, or it's used for a first-time home purchase.
Another common savings instrument is the 401k, named after a
provision in the 1978 Internal Revenue Code. These allow
employers to put money that is tax-deferred into an account on
the employees behalf. You pay no income tax on the money until
it is withdrawn.
Those who have difficulty summoning the willpower to save often
find these helpful, since it's allocated before you see your
paycheck. Here again there are numerous variations around
today.
These and other savings methods can form part of a total
financial plan that involves borrowing and investment in many
forms. The more options you learn about, the better plan you
can develop to maximize your hard earned dollars.
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