T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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150.1 | | RAVEN1::MKENNEDY | Eschew sesquipedalianism | Thu Apr 09 1992 12:59 | 9 |
| Why be concerned about your dependents' retirements? By the time they
retire, you'll be interested in other things if you're still around.
Wouldn't it be better to put your emphasis on teaching them to earn a
living and giving them a start with such things as a college ed, business
start, or home down payment? If these aren't accomplished . . . well...
Tax free US bonds seem like a good choice for college.
Moffatt
|
150.2 | Why not do both? | EPIK::FINNERTY | | Thu Apr 09 1992 13:28 | 13 |
|
those aren't mutually exclusive options. i think it's a great idea to
set up an IRA for young kids, if it is possible to do so. I recently
calculated that 2K/year for 5 years plus a guesstimate for social
security benefits would account for somewhere between 60-80% of a
reasonable retirement income (assuming the money returned 11.5%
throughout the 60 years prior to retirement).
if I could afford the 2K/year * 2 kids for the next 5 years, I'd
definately go for it.
/Jim
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150.3 | Curiosity can be idle | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Apr 09 1992 15:26 | 26 |
| Yes, it's not mutually exclusive. And helping to fund your
childrens' retirement can be one way of helping to fund your
grandchildrens' college educations (by freeing up money for
your children).
While I can't guarantee that IRAs will stick around as tax-free
vehicles for the next half-century, I am curious about the
details.
1. Is the adult restriction to max( 10% of earned income, 2K )
in effect?
2. If a parent pays a child, must that parent also do Social
Security payments, etc., as though the child were an
employee, or can the parent pay the child as a contractor
(and is a Keogh then possible?).
3. How does this interact with the under-14, income-over-$1K
taxation rule?
And so on.
At the moment it's idle curiosity, and likely to remain so.
But I like knowing things.
-John Bishop
|
150.4 | I like the way that man thinks... | TLE::EKLUND | Always smiling on the inside! | Fri Apr 10 1992 12:32 | 21 |
| I looked over the description in Pub 17 (in my office). There
appears to be no age restriction. It's %100 (not %10, a typo?) or
$2000, whichever is smaller. I would not wish to defend "wages"
from a parent in an audit, unless you can demonstrate that it's
comparable to what you would have paid for the "services" provided
on the open market. However, while I admire taking such a LOOOOOOOONG
term view of things, it is difficult to justify in the short term.
I would point out that currently financial aid at colleges tends
to consider retirement funds as untouchable (not part of your real
usable assets), and hence putting such money into an IRA may legally
hide it over the college years. This applies to parents usually, but
would equally apply to children. I forget the number of years where
the penalty on early withdrawal is breakeven, but it strikes me that
it's less than ten years. This makes it even more attractive, since
the money could be withdrawn after schooling, paying the penalties,
and still come out ahead.
Cheers!
Dave Eklund
|
150.5 | Fund kid's IRA with Remodel Projects | JURAN::KITCHIN | | Wed Apr 22 1992 01:24 | 43 |
|
I second 150.4.
Also, note that $1 invested to return 8% after
inflation (whiich I think is comparable to long-term stock
returns) will grow to over $100 in 60 years (figure retirement
for today's 5 year olds at say 70). Thus, every $1000 you
can get into your child's self-directed IRA invested in a
growth mutual fund will yield him $100,000 in today's dollars
at retirment. I have 4 four children, and that seems a cheap
way to provide a "lifelong" gift.
The problem is how to get children earned income. If you
have a business, that's easy. I don't (at present) but
read of another approach. If you are remodeling your house
(I am finishing my basement and also building a wooden fence
around my backyard) I read (I can't recall the book at present)
that you can pay your children reasonabel wages to work
on those projects and deduct what you pay them from the
basis of your home just as you would the money you
pay a contractor to do such work. For example, I am paying
my 12-year old minimum wage to dig the fencepost holes and
to help me put the fence up. Five wonderful advantages:
(1) He is excited about working!
(2) He is learning a skill (the carpentry, not
just digging holes---I did this sort of work
to pay for my college)
(3) Its taking a lot less of my time to do the job
and the cost of that time saved is being plowed
back into the family
(4) He and I are having a lot a fun---lots of chatting
about work and interests---Dad and son stuff
(5) We agreed that part of his pay would go
to savings. I will be setting up a self-drected
IRA for him as son as he accumulates enough money.
Anybody else out there doing this (are all you all just groaning
under the college tuition savings programs you've undertaken)?
John K
|
150.6 | Does sound like a nice idea, though | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Apr 22 1992 12:45 | 8 |
| re .5
Are you also paying his Social Security, etc.? I don't know
at what amounts you convert from casually handing over a five-spot
to being an employer. And I wonder what documentation you'd need
to confirm that the money was earned income and not a gift.
-John
|
150.7 | Doing the FICA soft-shoe shuffle. | MIMS::SOVEREIGN_S | but once a knight is enough(?) | Thu Apr 23 1992 15:15 | 18 |
| Pay him as a subcontractor, up to $400/year. (As much as $433, unless
they change the rules for the SE form.) Document it by sending a 1099
to the IRS, and have him file a Sched C to report the "self-employment"
income.
The $ you spend are *added* to the basis of your house...
You said you had agreed that "part" of the pay would go to
savings...work it out so that part is the subcontractor income, and
have the rest be a gift. This will limit the amount you get to add to
your house basis, but keep you out of the quagmire that goes with being
a formal "employer", reporting, withholding and paying the employer
match on social secutiry, etc.
Even without all the tax twiddling, it sounds like you've come up with
a good way to keep "dad" and "friend" synonymous. Good job!
SteveSov
|
150.8 | More on Hiring Child to Fund IRA | JURAN::KITCHIN | | Fri Apr 24 1992 23:38 | 26 |
| RE .6 and .7
The issues you raise about FICA and other employer withholding
responsibilities. I haven't fully resolve that yet, since I
have two conflicting pieces of data:
(1) Congress ended the exemption from FICA taxes for wages
paid to a spouse, parent, or minor child in the 1987
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 (ref = "Starting
and operating a business in Massachusetts," by Jenkins
and Curtis, Oasis Press, 1988)
(2) "Salaries paid to children under 19 are not subject to
Social Security tax" from page 351 of "More Wealth Without
Risk" by Givens, Simon & Schuster, 1991
This is one of many items I will be discussing with a tax attorney
shortly.
If anyone has ony solid information on the current status of this
question, I would be very interested. Even if FICA must be paid,
I think it is worth it to get the IRA funded and growing Fed
and State Tax free. I have other uses for the $500 kiddie tax
exemption on unearned income that he enjoys.
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