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Discover the Simple Secret to Building Wealth
Personal Financial Management is a topic that is growing
in complexity. It seems like more financial and insurance
investment products are available every day.
We really don't know what benefits may or may not be
available to us in the U.S. from government programs
in the future. So it's not wise to count on those programs
for future income in whole or probably even in part.
Many people are simply unprepared and uneducated about
how to implement long-term investment plans for their
future. It's critical that everyone have at least a
basic understanding about how to accumulate and preserve
personal wealth.
Financial Management is a very broad topic, but I'll
focus on the two major types of retirement plans that
may be available to many of us in the workplace. I want
to explain the two types and encourage you to participate
in them if you aren't doing so already.
The first is called a Defined Benefit Pension Plan
and the second is called a Defined Contribution Plan.
A Defined Benefit Pension Plan gives the participant
a specific monthly benefit at retirement. It could be
an exact dollar amount or it could be calculated using
a formula that considers the retired employee's salary
and length of employment with the company.
The important thing to remember about a Defined Benefit
Pension is that the investment decisions are made 100%
by the employer on behalf of the employee. The employee
doesn't have to save a dime out of their paycheck or
even think about how to best invest this money, because
they never see it.
For a Defined Benefit Pension, the employer takes all
risk and responsibility to make sure that they'll be
able to fully pay all retired employees who qualify
for the benefit. They use the services of an Actuary
to make complicated calculations that forecast their
future income needs for all employees who are likely
to qualify for retirement benefits.
The catch is that the length of service to qualify
for Defined Benefit Pensions is usually very long. If
an employee leaves the company prior to the required
length of service, they lose this valuable benefit.
Fewer and fewer employers offer Defined Benefit Pensions
because they're very costly.
If you have a Defined Benefit Pension Plan with your
company, consider yourself fortunate!
The second and most common type of retirement plan
is the Defined Contribution Plan. These provide an individual
account for each participant. You may know these as
401(k)s or 403(b)s, for example.
A 401(k) plan allows an employee to have their employer
contribute a portion of his or her cash wages to the
plan on a pretax basis.
A 403(b) plan, also known as a tax-sheltered annuity
(TSA) plan, is a retirement plan for certain employees
of public schools, tax-exempt organizations, and clergy.
The benefits are determined by the amount an employee
chooses to contribute, up to a yearly maximum set by
the IRS. For 2007 the maximum contribution to a 401(k)
is $15,500. Participants have a certain degree of control
over the investment choices and can conveniently fund
them through payroll deductions.
Many employers who offer a 401(k) to their employees
also throw in an added bonus to encourage investment.
They'll match a set portion of the employee's yearly
investment. If you leave the company, you can take your
401(k) money with you and "roll it over" into
a new plan.
Understand that the portion of money that was given
to you from the employer in the form of matching usually
has a vesting schedule tied to it. So this means you
may forfeit all or a portion of those matched funds
depending on how long you were with the company.
However, there are some 401(k)s, with what's called
Safe Harbor plans, that allow for full vesting of all
employer contributions. If your employer has a Safe
Harbor 401(k), you get to take 100% of your matched
money with you if you leave the company.
If you have the option to invest in a 401(k) or 403(b),
don't take it for granted. Make sure to at least invest
enough money each year to optimize the employer's match
to you.
If you own or manage a small business, putting a 401(k)
in place may not be as expensive as you think. The one-time
activation fee and annual administration fees can be
as little as a total of $1,500 per year.
Over time, there has been a shift from Defined Benefit
Pension Plans to Defined Contribution Plans in the workplace.
This shift has resulted in a big challenge for many
average people because the result is a transfer of risk
and responsibility for creating retirement income from
the employer down to the individual worker.
Never procrastinate investing for your future because
you think you don't have enough to invest right now.
You can't think that you'll invest once you get that
promotion or land that big account.
You'll come out ahead if you invest a little bit on
a regular basis right now rather than waiting to invest
a larger amount in the future. When it comes to Personal
Financial Management, time is of the essence. So, the
biggest secret to building wealth is simple: to get
ahead, get started!
Author: Laura Adams
Laura Adams is the host of the popular MBA Working
Girl Podcast. The content combines brainy business school
theory with real-world business practice from her career
as a business owner, manager, consultant and trainer.
Subscribe for FREE to this top-rated show and get the
useful MBA Essential Tip at http://www.mbaworkinggirl.com
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