|
The
Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 Summary
by James
Lange, CPA, JD
Introduction
President Bush
is about to sign a massive piece of legislation with a far-reaching
impact on the economy and individual taxpayers. The Act, known as
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001,
provides taxpayers with the largest tax reduction in 20 years.
The following
article summarizes what I consider some of the more important provisions
of the Act, i.e., those that will have an impact on the greatest
number of taxpayers and, by extension, many readers of this article.
As commentators and practitioners become better acquainted with
the new provisions and changes, more implications will surface.
We will continue to discover ways for our clients to benefit from
all the new legal methods for enhancing wealth and reducing taxes.
Only as time
progresses will the full effect of the Act be felt. Many of the
important provisions will be phased-in, and many will have extended
effective dates. One fascinating feature of the Act is that on December
31, 2010, all the provisions of the Act disappear. This reminds
me of Cinderella. On midnight, December 31, 2010, the fine dress,
the horses and carriage (all the tax benefits of the Act) revert
back to rags, mice and a pumpkin (the law as it stands without the
tax Act). The Prince, however, will enjoy a tax cut of $53,120 while
Cinderella will get a $347 break. This assumes the Prince will enjoy
the average reduction of the 1.3 million of the highest income group
and that Cinderella will receive the average of the lowest income
group of 78 million. (Source: Citizens for Tax Justice).
Overview
This article
concentrates on three areas with significant changes:
- Estate tax
- Income tax
- Retirement
Plan provisions
I have also
suggested some action points to set the wheels of change in motion.
Estate Tax
Changes
The most important
action point centers on the increase in the uniform exemption amount.
Currently set at $675,000, the exemption will increase substantially
over the next few years. In addition, estate tax rates are being
reduced. Ultimately, if you die in the year 2010, there is no estate
tax. If you die in 2011, the federal estate tax will be based on
current law.
The following
table, taken directly from the Act, says it better than I can:
Table 1
Estate and Gift Tax Rates and Unified Credit Exemption Amount
| Calendar
Year |
Estate
and GST
Tax Deathtime
Transfer
Exemption |
Highest
Estate and
Gift Tax Rates |
| 2001 |
$675,000 |
55% |
| 2002 |
$1
million |
50% |
| 2003 |
$1
million |
49% |
| 2004 |
$1.5
million |
48% |
| 2005 |
$1.5
million |
47% |
| 2006 |
$2
million |
46% |
| 2007 |
$2
million |
45% |
| 2008 |
$2
million |
45% |
| 2009 |
$3.5
million |
45% |
| 2010 |
N/A
(taxes repealed) |
top
individual rate
under the bill (gift
tax only) |
As the table
shows, fewer estates will be subject to estate tax and the ones
that will be subject to estate taxes, will be taxed at lower rates.
How Does
This Affect You?
This is great
news for wealthy taxpayers with significant (greater than $1M) estates.
For taxpayers with enormous estates, this is a great start toward
heaven. For taxpayers with estates larger than $3.5 million, all
terminal illnesses and fatal accidents should be planned for the
year 2010. (Please remember those pesky phase-ins and Cinderella
provisions).
The Nastiest
Trap of All
The Act creates
an horrendous trap for taxpayers who have existing estate plans
in place.
Let us assume
you have the type of will or revocable trust that creates a B Trust,
alternately called the Unified Exemption Equivalent Trust, the Unified
Credit Shelter Trust, Bypass Trust etc. Upon the death of the first
spouse, the applicable exclusion amount is automatically paid into
this trust, which will pay income to the surviving spouse for his
or her life and provide the right to invade principal for health,
maintenance and support. At the death of the surviving spouse, the
trust is usually distributed to the children equally. This type
of trust is used to exclude the proceeds of the trust from the estate
of the second spouse.
Under the old
law, this type of trust helped save on estate taxes, but unfortunately,
under the new law, it creates a trap. Most of these trusts are structured
so that:
- the exemption
equivalent (currently $675,000, increasing to $1,000,000 in 2002,
$1,500,000 in 2004, $2,000,000 in 2006, and $3,500,000 in 2009)
is distributed to the trust, and then,
- the balance
of the estate (if any) is distributed to the surviving spouse.
Under both the
old law and the new law, surviving spouses enjoy an unlimited marital
deduction (assuming the spouse is a U.S. citizen). There was and
there will continue to be no tax at the first death. If you have
a trust in place, at the first death, a certain amount will go to
the trust and the rest to the surviving spouse. At the second death,
since the amount in the unified credit shelter trust is not included
in the second estate, only the surviving spouse's own money would
be taxable.
But here's the
rubfewer and fewer second estates will be subject to estate tax
as the exemption increases. So, does this mean you can relax about
estate planning?
Alas, no rest
for the weary.
Presuming you
have the type of documents that will force an amount equivalent
to (or less than) the unified credit shelter amount (currently at
$675,000 and increasing quickly) into the unified credit shelter
trust, this may mean that your existing documents will put most
of your assets into the trust at the expense of your surviving spouse.
The way most attorneys draft that trust is that the amount of the
unified credit is used to fund the trust and the balance is left
to the spouse. While funding the trust was critical when saving
estate taxes was the issue, depending on the size of the estate
and year of death, that logic may no longer apply. Your current
documents may ensure that a huge amount of money goes into the B
Trust and that only a small, or maybe no amount, will be left directly
to your surviving spouse.
Many surviving
spouses will be most unhappy to find that as a result of the increased
exemption amounts, more money is going to a trust for their benefit
and less money is going directly to them. There is a good chance
that the surviving spouse would generally prefer money be in their
name directly rather than in trust.
Furthermore,
the costs and fees for maintaining the trust (including legal, financial
and accounting) could end up being a burdensome and unnecessary
expense for the family.
What if Retirement
Assets will Fund the Trust?
If the assets
that fund the trust are retirement assets (IRAs, 401(k)s, 403(b)s,
etc.), then the minimum distribution for the trust would be significantly
higher than the minimum distribution if the money was held outright
by the surviving spouse. This accelerated minimum distribution will
result in higher income taxes for the surviving spouse. To make
matters worse, at the death of the surviving spouse, there will
be an enormous acceleration of income for the family, thereby depriving
the family of the enormous potential from a Stretch IRA.
(More specifically,
the minimum required distribution of the trust is based on the life
expectancy of the surviving spouse. If instead, the IRA is left
to the surviving spouse outright, without a trust, and the surviving
spouse rolls the IRA into his or her own IRA, the minimum distribution
will be based on the joint life expectancy of the surviving spouse
and a beneficiary who will be considered to be ten years younger
than the surviving spouse.)
At the death
of the surviving spouse, if the IRA were left to the trust, the
children would be required to maintain distributions at the rate
established when the surviving spouse was alive.
If the surviving
spouse dies with the IRA in his or her name, then the children beneficiaries
will be able to take minimum distributions based on their actual
life expectancies, not the remainder of the actuarial life expectancy
of their deceased parent.
The kicker is,
that with the increased unified credit shelter amount, the trust
may serve no purpose. That is, depending on the size of the estate,
with the increased unified credit shelter amount, there may be no
estate tax even if you leave everything outright to the surviving
spouse.
Potentially,
your past estate planning may hurt your surviving spouse and family.
Under the new laws, many clients would be better off with simple
I love you wills and named beneficiaries of their IRA, than with
their existing documents. I love you wills leave everything to
the spouse and, at second death, to the children equally.
Anyone with
an automatic (not disclaimer-based) B Trust, Bypass Trust, etc.,
in his or her estate planning documents should plan on having their
wills and trusts rewritten to avoid this horrendous trap.
Please note:
most of my clients will not have to change their wills or trusts
because we use a disclaimer approach. Briefly stated, most of
my married clients have wills, revocable trusts or beneficiary designations
of the retirement plans and IRAs that leave everything to their
surviving spouse and the B trust as the secondary beneficiary. Like
the doctor's motto: First do no harm. Since January, when changes
were instituted in the minimum distribution schedules, I have preferred
an extended version of the disclaimer approach that I called Lange's
Cascading Beneficiary Plan. My approach, described more fully
in the article, MRDefenses:
Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Estate Planning with
the New Minimum Required Distribution Rules, March 2001,
Financial Planning ©2000 Thomson Financial Investment
Marketing Group, (hereafter referred to as MRDefenses) is
still what I would consider the ideal plan for many taxpayers, especially
after the new changes. Furthermore, the flexibility of the disclaimer
approach provides the perfect support for the transient nature of
all the changes.
Estate Tax
Repeal in 2010
Under the new
law, estate taxes and generation skipping taxes are scheduled to
be repealed in 2010 (but only for 2010). Some families may save
hundreds of millions of dollars. However, in 2010, the gift tax
is not repealed, though it is reduced. This will mean that in 2010,
you can die and leave money without estate taxes but you will not
be able to give all your money away, while you are living, without
gift taxes. This is not logically consistent, but neither are many
of the provisions of the Act. The unified credit shelter amount
refers to the unity of gift and estate taxes. It took years for
Congress to tie in the gift tax to the estate tax. Now, that logically
consistent precedent is destroyed.
For example,
let us assume you have a $10,000,000 estate. It is year 2010 and
there is no estate tax. If you die, you can pass all your money
to your family without federal estate taxes. A legitimate fear in
that situation is that if you survive past year 2010 but die soon
after, there will be a significant estate tax. A way to defend against
that possibility is to give away a large part of your money in 2010.
However, under the new Act, even though you could die with the money
and your heirs would suffer no taxes, your beneficiaries will suffer
a tax if you live and give them the money in the year 2010. In year
2011, unless there is subsequent legislation, the current law will
prevail. What a mess!
Not the Last
Dance
This Act is
clearly not the final word on tax reform. Something should happen
to soften the impact of the Cinderella provisions. In addition,
it is easy to picture Republicans wanting to give further breaks
to businesses, reduce alternative minimum taxes, reduce capital
gains rates, etc. The Democrats will likely resist these changes
and attempt to restore the estate tax for large estates. This country
had an estate tax long before it had an income tax and England has
had an estate tax since 1066, courtesy of William the Conqueror.
Effectively repealing the tax in just ten years is truly a radical
change and it is possible that the pendulum will swing, deficits
will return, and estate taxes on the rich may become politically
more feasible than income and social security taxes on the lower
and middle class.
It is important
to understand that this Act does not institute any huge immediate
changes, but rather gradual, ever increasingly important changes
as time progressesas the charts demonstrate. Some experts believe
that these changes, as they are written, will never become a reality.
They believe that future administrations will make subsequent modifications,
perhaps returning to a tax structure that is closer to present law.
Start Thinking
about Things Differently
In a fundamental
shift, estate-planning will be less motivated by avoiding transfer
tax and more motivated by reducing income tax. For an in-depth discussion
of estate planning with a goal of reducing future income taxes,
particularly regarding the stretch IRA, please read my article,
MRDefenses.
Furthermore,
clients are going to have to ask themselves some harder questions.
With the direction toward a massive reduction in estate taxes, the
taxpayer will need to explore more specifically how they want their
estate distributed. This will be tough for a lot of clients. Many
of my clients don't really know what they want and previously they
were willing to let tax avoidance dictate the terms of their wills
and trusts.
For example,
the primary motivation of the old B Trust was to save estate taxes
at the second death. If the expanded exemption amount will be higher
than the projected total estate, clients will have the freedom,
as well as the burden and responsibility, to determine where they
want their funds to go after they die.
Most married
clients with traditional families know they want to provide for
their surviving spouses and children and sometimes grandchildren.
The question will become, assuming there are no federal estate taxes
at the first or second death, do you want to leave everything to
your surviving spouse? Perhaps it would be beneficial to leave some
of the money to your children on a first death, not to save estate
taxes but because it may be the best use of the money for the family.
As shown in the article, MRDefenses,
there is certainly income tax motivation to leaving IRAs and retirement
plans to younger beneficiaries.
Alternately,
clients could use the approach that I have been advocating where
the surviving spouse, presumably with expert advice, makes all the
critical distribution decisions after the death of the first spouse.
In order to use this strategy, however, the options have to be in
place; spelled out in wills, revocable trusts, and IRA and retirement
plan beneficiary designations while both spouses are still alive.
Loss of Step
Up in Basis
Starting the
year 2010, the step up in basis rules will be repealed. (Please
see my article, Capital Gains Reduction with Gallenstein,
Pennsylvania Bar News, December 19, 1994, for a more
thorough discussion).
However, there
is an amount that will be permitted a step up in basis. In the year
2010, decedent's estates are allowed a $1.3 million step up in basis
and an additional $3 million step up in basis if you left certain
qualifying property to your spouse. This provision will partially
offset the benefits from the elimination of the estate tax in 2010.
Obviously, greater attention will need to be placed on the long-term
plans for uses of appreciated investments.
Return to
Jointly Held Assets
Another action
point that the new estate tax laws suggest is a return to old fashioned
jointly held assets between husband and wife. For years I have been
preaching the wisdom of separate assets in order for each spouse
to have their own money to fund their own unified credit shelter
trust. If that becomes unnecessary because the entire estate is
less than the new exemption (or in 2010, all estates), then the
added legal protection of owning assets as joint tenants between
husband and wife could outweigh the tax benefits of separate ownership.
Simply stated, many states protect jointly held assets between husband
and wife against the claims of one of the joint tenants.
What of the
Next Generation?
There are also
significant changes to the State death tax credit and the generation
skipping tax provisions. Taxpayers who have existing generation
skipping tax provisions or who have made GST an important part of
their planning should review their documents to take advantage of
the new changes.
Clients may
have to do some soul searching to answer the question, How do I
want my money distributed when I die?
New 10% Bracket
Under the current
law, the lowest tax bracket is 15%. Under the new law, starting
on July 1, 2001, the 10% bracket applies to the first $6,000 of
taxable income for singles ($7,000 for years 2008 and after), $10,000
for head of household, and $12,000 for married couples filing jointly.
In lieu of having
the lower 10% tax bracket for 2001 when you complete your 2001 tax
return, the Act includes a rate reduction credit for 2001 to deliver
the benefit of the difference between the 10% and 15% rate. This
refund is based on the year 2000 tax returns filed, so it really
is not a true 2001 credit. For singles, the credit is calculated
$600 times 50%, or $300, $500 for head of households, and $600 for
married filing jointly. It should be noted that if your year 2000
tax return did not have at least $6,000 of taxable income for singles
($12,000 for married couples filing jointly and $10,000 for heads
of household), then you will not receive the full refund.
The Act includes
a credit for 2001 to deliver the benefit of the difference between
the 10% and 15% rate. For singles, the credit is calculated $600
times 50%, or $300, $500 for head of households, and $600 for married
filing jointly.
Most taxpayers
who filed their 2000 tax return on time will likely receive a check
before October 1, 2001 for either, $300, $500, or $600 depending
on their filing status. Please note that all taxpayers will benefit
from this new 10% rate because of the design of the marginal tax
brackets, not simply lower income taxpayers. However, many low income
tax bracket taxpayers will not receive a rebate or will only receive
a partial rebate.
The following
table best summarizes the changes in the Regular Income Tax Rate
Reductions over and above the new 10% bracket.
Table 2
Regular Income Tax Rate Reductions
| Calendar
Year: |
|
|
|
|
| 2000 |
28%
rate
reduced to: |
31%
rate
reduced to: |
36%
rate
reduced to: |
39.6%
rate
reduced to: |
| 2001 |
27.5% |
30.5% |
35.5% |
39.1% |
| 2002
2003 |
27% |
30% |
35% |
38.6% |
| 2004
2005 |
26% |
29% |
34% |
37.6% |
| 2006
and later |
25% |
28% |
33% |
35% |
An obvious action
point for most taxpayers is to accelerate expenses and defer income.
In light of the decreasing tax rates, this advice becomes even more
valuable.
Phase-Out
of Itemized Deductions and Personal Exemptions
Under the previous
law, there were limitations placed on the total deductible itemized
deductions and exemptions. The law effectively raised the tax rate
for high-income earners. Beginning in 2006 and 2007, the existing
overall limitation on itemized deductions and personal exemptions
will be reduced by one-third and by two-thirds for 2008 and 2009.
For year 2010, the limitation is eliminated and the full limitations
are restored in year 2011.
Goodies for
Kids
The Act increases
the child tax credit to $1,000 over a ten-year period.
Table 3
Increase of the Child Tax Credit
| Calendar
Year |
Credit
Amount Per Child |
| 2001
2004 |
$600 |
| 2005
2008 |
$700 |
| 2009 |
$800 |
| 2010
and later |
$1,000 |
There are limitations
on the credit, but the basic idea is that working families with
kids will benefit.
There are also
increased adoption tax benefits, dependent day care tax credits
and tax credits for employer-provided child care facilities.
Marriage
Penalty Relief
The attempted
elimination of the marriage penalty is achieved through a combination
of rate reductions, standard deduction changes, and the way the
childcare credit is calculated. Changes in the standard deduction
don't help taxpayers who itemize deductions. Virtually all of these
changes start slowly and are gradually phased in until 2009 when
they all become fully effective. Even after fully effective, there
will still be a marriage penalty, but not as large as current law.
Education
Education IRAs,
something that I have never been excited about because the previous
limit was only $500, will expand to $2,000. I am still not too excited,
but there are income limits so wealthier taxpayers will not be able
to take advantage of this provision. Barry Picker, CPA and IRA expert,
says, no problem. Give the money to your children and have the children
fund their own account. Since there is no need for income to fund
an account, your child or grandchild can take advantage of this
provision while you cannot. Withdrawals are tax-free to pay school
expenses. In addition, the Act allows withdrawals for K-12 expenses,
including tuition for private and parochial schools as well as college.
This means you could gift your children money, have them make a
contribution to their education IRA, and later use those same funds
to pay for their private grade or high school tuition and expenses.
The new limits are effective in 2002. There are also a host of other
small favorable changes relating to the HOPE credit and lifetime
learning credit.
A more significant
change is to the private prepaid tuition programs and Section 529
savings plans (also called qualified state tuition programs). Up
until now, I have preferred the 529 savings plans to the in-state
sponsored prepaid tuition plans. Now, I will take a closer look
at the prepaid plans because the changes open avenues for private
colleges and the terms are more favorable. A good source for more
information would be Joseph Hurley's web site at www.savingforcollege.com.
Joe Hurley, as I have, has always favored the 529 qualified state
tuition program savings plan. He sent out an e-mail stating that
after the changes, he was even more excited about the 529 savings
plan. The 529 savings plan will now allow tax-free benefits for
the student for qualifying expenses. The old law allowed tax deferrals,
but the student had to pay tax on the growth upon withdrawal. Now,
as long as the funds are used for qualified education expenses,
there will be no income tax on the distributions. (But that is also
something that could be changed in the future).
In addition
to the different 529 plans, the Education IRAs, and the HOPE credit,
married taxpayers with an AGI of $130,000 or less will be able to
deduct $3,000 in 2002 and 2003 for tuition and other qualifying
education expenses. In 2004 and 2005, the deduction increases to
$5,000. There is no deduction after 2005. Now there will be true
competition between the various Section 529 saving plans, the newly
enhanced prepaid tuition plans, the Education IRAs, and direct payment
of partially deductible tuition. For now, it is sufficient to know
there are a lot of good choices. Given the mentality of most of
my clients (and me too), if I had to choose one, I would still go
with the 529 savings plan. The feature I love most about the 529
savings plan is that the person establishing the education fund
can use the money for himself or herself if he or she so chooses.
The new rules
and additional benefits provide for the possibility of exploiting
the 529 plans in a way the IRS has perhaps not anticipated. This
is a great time to be rich.
If you are wealthy
and married, consider contributing up to $100,000 (much smaller
amounts will be far more common) to each of your grandchildren's
529 savings plans. (Please be sure to see if the state plan you
are interested in doesn't have rules that would make this plan unfeasible.)
I arrive at that figure in the following way: both grandparents
may give up to five years gifts of $10,000 per year, i.e., $10,000
X 2 X 5. This gets a lot of money out of your estate and the money
grows tax-free. If, upon your or a designated custodian's approval,
the grandchild withdraws money for a qualified education use, there
is no tax on the original contribution nor on the growth in the
account.
Another idea,
perhaps approaching an abuse of the tax laws follows: When the children
or grandchildren go to college, let the money in the 529 plan sit
and pay their tuition directly which is not deemed a gift. The child
or grandchild can then maintain the investment for their children's
education.
Remember, even
if you need the money, you can make withdrawals for yourself from
your children's or grandchildren's 529 savings plans. The money
is subject to a 10% penalty if withdrawn for non-qualifying uses,
i.e., not relating to education. If the money is invested long enough,
whether you make non-qualified withdrawals or whether the beneficiaries
make nonqualified withdrawals, then the 10% penalty on the earnings
will pale compared to the benefits of tax-free growth.
Even forgetting
the aggressive idea of using the 529 as a tax shelter over and above
true education expenses, the Section 529 savings plan is still my
favorite way to provide for a child's or grandchild's educationand
it just got better. I will admit, that even though all the changes
are favorable, it is now more complicated to choose a strategy because
there are so many good options if you have a lot of money.
Alternative
Minimum TaxBeware
The alternative
minimum tax has been a thorn in wealthy taxpayers' sides for years.
Now it is a dagger. For many taxpayers who never heard about it
or never worried about itbeware. The original idea of the alternative
minimum tax was to prevent a taxpayer with a substantial income,
who also had significant deductions and exemptions, from avoiding
a significant tax liability.
The alternative
minimum is a tax that is calculated separately from the traditional
income tax. If the alternative calculation is higher than the regular
tax, the taxpayer must pay the higher alternative minimum tax. The
alternative minimum tax calculation gives either no weight or partial
weight to a variety of deductions and exemptions. In addition, the
alternative minimum tax calculation uses a different income tax
rate schedule. One glaring omission is the Act did not adjust alternative
minimum tax rates for inflation.
The Act includes
modest and temporary relief from the alternative minimum tax. The
bill increases the limit on deductions that are exempt from the
alternative minimum tax by $4,000 to $49,000 for married and by
$2,000 to $24,500 for singles. But even this relief is dropped in
2005.
The impact of
the Act is that many more taxpayers who would have never had an
alternative minimum tax problem will likely fall within the alternative
minimum tax's grasp. After you get through running the numbers for
the new Act, the conclusion is that taxpayers making roughly between
$70,000 and $600,000 will have a much smaller tax break than they
think. According to the Citizens for Tax Justice, a couple
with two children and with an income of $373,000 will receive a
base tax cut of $11,900 before alternative minimum tax but only
enjoy a $2,940 break after alternative minimum tax.
Those making
over $600,000 will not likely qualify for alternative minimum tax
and will enjoy the full benefits of the Act. For residents with
high state income taxes and property taxes, the alternative minimum
tax will hit hard.
Pension and
Individual Retirement Arrangement Provisions
For many taxpayers,
the greatest benefits will be derived from the long-term impact
of the Pension and Individual Retirement Arrangement Provisions
Act. Coupled with the recent changes Congress enacted on January
11, 2001, (see my article, Life
Simplified and SweetenedSweeping Changes for IRAs and Retirement
Plans, January 2001), retirement plans, IRAs and Roth IRAs
will play an increasingly important role for tax savvy investors.
The new provisions:
- Allow increased
contributions to traditional and Roth IRAs.
- Allow substantial
increases in voluntary contributions to many employer's retirement
plans.
- Provide catch-up
provisions for taxpayers who are 50 and beyond.
- Create a
new Roth 401(k).
- Provide breaks
for small business owners regarding retirement plans.
- Provide credit
for low-income taxpayers who contribute to retirement plans.
Increased
IRAs and Roth IRAs
The Act provides
for an increase in both traditional and Roth IRAs.
Table 4
Deductible IRAs
For
taxable years
beginning in: |
The
deductible
amount is: |
| 2001
|
$2,000 |
| 2002
through 2004
|
$3,000 |
| 2005
through 2007
|
$4,000 |
| 2008
and thereafter
.
|
$5,000 |
Substantial
Increases in Allowable Contributions to 401(k), 403(b) and Other
Retirement Plans
The present
law allows employees to contribute 15% or $10,500 (whichever is
lower) to their 401(k) plan or 403(b) plan. Under the new law, employees
will be able to contribute even more to their retirement plan, moving
more assets into the tax deferred environment. This significant
switch will have enormous implications for long-term retirement
and estate planning.
Table 5
Increase in Employee's Retirement Contribution
For
taxable years
beginning in
calendar year: |
The
applicable
dollar amount is: |
| 2001
. |
$10,500 |
| 2002
. |
$11,000 |
| 2003
. |
$12,000 |
| 2004
. |
$13,000 |
| 2005
. |
$14,000 |
| 2006
and thereafter
.
.
. |
$15,000 |
Catch-Up
Provisions for Individuals 50 and Older
The Act will
allow taxpayers, 50 or over, to make additional deductible contributions
to retirement plans, IRA plans, employer sponsored plans, and SIMPLE
plans.
Table 6
IRA Catch-Up Contributions for 50 or Older
For
taxable years
beginning in: |
The
deductible
amount is: |
| 2002
through 2005
..
.. |
$500 |
| 2006
and thereafter..
.... |
$1,000 |
The greater
catch-up provisions are in the later years for employer-sponsored
plans. In those plans, the employee, assuming he meets the income
qualification, will be able to increase their contribution according
to the following table.
Table 7
Increase of Employee Contribution for Taxpayers 50 and Older
For
taxable years
beginning in: |
The
applicable dollar
amount is: |
| 2002.
.
.......................
|
$1,000 |
| 2003
.
................
.. |
$2,000 |
| 2004
..
.
...
|
$3,000 |
| 2005
.
....
. |
$4,000 |
| 2006
and thereafter
....
.
|
$5,000 |
Creation
of a Roth 401(k) and 403(b)
Starting in
2006, current participants in 401(k) and 403(b) plans will be able
to make contributions to a retirement plan through work, which will
have practically all of the tax characteristics of a Roth IRA. Participants
will not receive an income tax deduction for the contribution, but
the amount contributed will grow income tax free, quite similar
to a Roth IRA. Another interesting feature of the Roth 401(k) is
that employees who have been making nondeductible contributions
to their retirement plan can now substitute a Roth 401(k) plan for
the nondeductible portion.
Once the provision
takes effect, employees will face a significant choice: Do I continue
contributing to the traditional tax-deferred environment? Or, do
I move to the Roth environment?
When calculating
the amount of the contribution to the plan it is also important
to factor in the percentage of the employees contribution that is
matched by the employer (if your employer sponsors this type of
plan).
Another interesting
feature of the Roth 401(k) is that employees who have been making
nondeductible contributions to their retirement plan can now substitute
a Roth 401(k) plan for the nondeductible portion.
Example:
Professor Smart has a base salary of $180,000 at the University
of Pittsburgh. The University has a policy of contributing 150%
of the employees' contribution up to 8% of salary. Therefore, in
the past, Professor Smart contributed the full 8% of salary for
$14,400. Only $10,500 was deductible. However, since it was prudent,
Professor Smart contributed the additional $3,900. The University
contributed $21,600. Assuming he makes the same salary in 2006,
there are two significant changes. If he wanted to, Professor Smart
could contribute the $14,400 and obtain the full tax deduction instead
of $10,500. Alternately, he could do what I will generally
recommend which is to contribute the full $14,400 into a Roth 403(b).
He could also split his share of the contribution in any proportion
between the deductible account and the Roth 403(b) account.
In either case, the University will contribute $21,600 which will
be deposited in his regular 403(b).
In previous
articles, I have compared the benefits of a traditional IRA (which
for our purposes is treated as a deductible 401(k) or 403 (b)) to
a Roth IRA. The winner: the Roth IRA. Please see Jim's article,
IRAs After the TRA 97 What
Hath Congress Roth?, May 1998, The Tax Adviser
©1998 by The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
The New
York Times nicely summarized a combination of some of the
above tables.
Table 8
Saving for Retirement
Congress will
let Americans save more in tax-favored accounts as part of the new
tax-cut bill.
Maximum Any
Individual Under 50 Can Save/Maximum Those 50 And Older Can Save
| |
2002 |
2003 |
2004 |
2005 |
2006 |
2007 |
2008 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Individual
Retire- |
$
3,000 |
$
3,000 |
$
3,000 |
$
4,000 |
$
4,000 |
$
4,000 |
$
5,000* |
| ment Accounts |
3,500 |
3,500 |
3,500 |
4,500 |
5,000 |
5,000 |
6,000 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Simple
Plans** |
$
7,000 |
$
8,000 |
$
9,000 |
$10,000 |
$10,000* |
$10,000* |
$10,000* |
| |
7,500 |
9,000 |
10,500 |
12,500 |
12,500 |
12,500 |
12,500 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 401(k),
403(b) |
$11,000 |
$12,000 |
$13,000 |
$14,000 |
$15,000 |
$15,000* |
$15,000* |
| and 457
Plans*** |
12,000 |
14,000 |
16,000 |
18,000 |
20,000 |
20,000 |
20,000 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Roth 401(k) |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
$15,000 |
$15,000* |
$15,000* |
| |
|
|
|
|
20,000 |
20,000 |
20,000 |
*Plus inflation
adjustment in $500 increments.
**Simple plans
are for enterprises with 100 or fewer workers.
***403(b) plans
are for nonprofits; 457 plans are for governments. In the last three
years before retirement, workers in 457 plans can save double the
limit for those under 50.
Note:
The maximum that an employer can contribute annually will rise to
$40,000 next year, a 14 percent increase, and will be adjusted for
inflation thereafter.
Changes in
the Minimum Distribution Rules
Before the Act,
the IRS made a tremendous change governing the minimum required
distributions of traditional IRAs, 401(k)s and 403(b)s, both during
the life and at the death of the IRA owner. The previous changes,
supplemented by the current legislation, will have an enormous impact
on retirement and estate planning for married retirees who are older
than 70½ and who have significant retirement assets in their retirement
plans. The earlier IRS changes allow IRAs to be stretched further
by reducing minimum required distributions. This attribute becomes
even more valuable as contributions to IRAs and Roth IRAs grow.
Please see my article, MRDefenses,
for a complete discussion of the recent IRS changes.
Unfortunately,
the Act calls for the IRS to adjust their life expectancy tables.
If I were the IRS, I would tell Congress to go pound salt. On January
11, 2001, the IRS, on their own, unilaterally simplified the minimum
required distribution rules. In a bold step, they made massive changes
to the life expectancy tables. In a rare display of intelligence
and effective execution, they significantly improved, simplified,
and set in motion an effective method for enforcement of the IRA
distribution rules. They did a great job. It seems most everyone,
who understands what they did, is happy. Just leave it alone.
That is one
of my gripes with the constant changes. Clients and practitioners
should have a set of tax laws on which they can, with some degree
of certainty, rely and plan. Instead, we are getting massive wholesale
changes that are likely to be constantly changed by both the present
and future administrations. The Cinderella doctrine alone makes
effective planning impossible (unless you use Lange's Cascading
Beneficiary Plan or a similar plan relying on disclaimers).
Prepare to
Shift Contributions to the Roth 401(k)
Starting in
the year 2006, the new law allows a choice between a Roth 401(k)
and a traditional contribution to a retirement plan. This will be
especially welcome for taxpayers who liked the idea of a Roth IRA
but up to now, their income has been too high to qualify for a Roth
IRA contribution or conversion. Based on analysis previously published
in Jim's article, IRAs After
the TRA 97 What Hath Congress Roth?, May 1998, The
Tax Adviser ©1998 by The American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants, in most cases, the Roth type retirement plans
will be more beneficial than the traditional plans.
So How Should
Employees Maximize their Retirement Savings?
Subject to some
exceptions, my preferences for accumulating wealth are:
- Participate
in any employer-matching program to the fullest extent.
- Put money
in the Roth IRA environment.
- Put money
in the traditional IRA or 401(k) environment.
If you are 50
or over, take advantage of the new catch-up provisions that allow
you to make additional contributions to IRAs and retirement plans
at work.
Fun for Small
Business Pension Plans
There are a
variety of different retirement plans including pension plans, profit-sharing
plans, defined benefit plans, top heavy plans, SIMPLE plans, and
others. Many of these plans are changed in a way that will allow
participants to contribute more money and employers to put more
money away for themselves.
For example,
sole proprietors have access to a SIMPLE plan that currently allows
a contribution of $6,500, even if Schedule C income is only $6,500.
Now, the SIMPLE plans will boast higher deductible contributions.
The increase in the deduction is as follows:
Table 9
Expansion of SIMPLE
For
taxable years
beginning in
calendar year: |
The
applicable
dollar amount is: |
| 2002
.
|
$7,000 |
| 2003
.
|
$8,000 |
| 2004
.
|
$9,000 |
| 2005
......
.. |
$10,000 |
Retirement
Savings for the Lower Income Taxpayers
This provision
will cause the cynics to chuckle while shaking their heads in disgust.
If your adjusted
income is low enough and you meet other eligibility requirements,
you will receive a tax credit of up to 50% for your contribution
to an IRA or other eligible retirement plan. (Students and dependents
are excluded.) For example, if you are a single mother with an adjusted
gross income of $22,500 or less and you contributed $2,000 to an
IRA, you would get an income tax credit of $1,000. This credit is
in addition to any deduction you may be eligible for. However, in
general, I would prefer the contribution be to a Roth IRA rather
than a traditional IRA or retirement plan.
That seems like
a nice break for low-income taxpayers until you think about it for
a minute. What single mother with an adjusted gross income of $22,500
or less can afford to make a $2,000 IRA contribution, even if their
true after-credit cost would be $1,000?
As a practical
matter, I intend to take advantage of this provision by telling
my wealthy clients to give money to their children (or grandchildren)
and have the children use the money to make an IRA contribution.
Example:
Your single daughter (not a dependent or full-time student) earns
$15,000. You give her $2,000 to contribute to her IRA. She makes
the Roth IRA contribution and also gets a $1,000 tax credit. That
is really a leveraged gift where you are providing $2,000 for her
retirement plan with tax-free growth and also providing her with
$1,000 to spend or save now for a total cost to you of $2,000.
The more you
make, the lower the percentage of your credit. Please see Table
10.
Table 10
Credit for Retirement Plan Contribution
Adjusted
Gross Income
| Joint
Return |
Head
of a household |
All
other cases |
Applicable
percentage |
| Over
Not over |
Over
Not over |
Over
Not over |
Over
Not over |
| |
|
|
|
|
$0 $30,000 |
$0
$22,500 |
$0
$15,000 |
50 |
|
30,000 32,500 |
22,500 24,375 |
15,000 16,250 |
20 |
|
32,500 50,000 |
24,375 37,500 |
16,250 25,000 |
10 |
|
50,000 |
37,500 |
25,000 |
0 |
The new rules
will also allow participants to put more money in other retirement
plans including: Section 457 plans, defined benefit plans, pension
and profit sharing plans, top-heavy plans, SIMPLE plans, SEP plans
and others. The plans will also be more portable and have greater
rollover possibilities between plans.
On a Final
NoteA Word of Caution
Within the next
few weeks a lot more information will be available. I will make
changes to this article, as I deem appropriate. Each time you access
the article from the Internet, you will receive the latest updated
version.
This article
is really just the start of what promises to be a complex, yet extremely
fruitful examination of the Act and ways you and your family can
benefit by taking advantage of the provisions.
Sources for
Additional Information
There is a reasonable
summary of the estate changes and income tax changes in the following
.pdf files at a House web site, http://www.house.gov/jct/x-50-01.pdf.
A more thorough, but awkwardly presented, source of information
is now available as a 186-page file, http://waysandmeans.house.gov/fullcomm/107cong/hr1836/legtext.pdf.
There is also a 258-page file, http://waysandmeans.house.gov/fullcomm/107cong/hr1836/statemgrs.pdf
(5/26/01, updated 5/29/01).
Best Thing
You Can Do for Yourself
Attend a seminar
that concentrates on retirement assets but incorporates the most
recent changes.
If you are
not a financial professional and live in the Pittsburgh area,
attend one of my seminars in Oakland on June 13th or
in Squirrel Hill on June 28th. Call 412-521-2732 to reserve your
seat.
If you are
a financial professional and live in or near Pittsburgh, PA; Detroit,
MI; Indianapolis, IN; Charleston, WV or Morgantown, WV, please call
412-521-2732 for details on how to register for an upcoming continuing
education seminar.
If you are interested
in having me examine your own retirement and estate plan, please
call 412-521-2732 to schedule a free initial consultation regardless
of where you live.
|