T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2747.1 | Excellent Questions! | WITNES::PILLIVANT | | Thu Oct 28 1993 13:56 | 13 |
| I read and re-read all material and cannot find an answer to these
excellent questions. I have tried to find on the forms how you
direct this opt-out payment into Save and cannot find a field for
that option. Worse yet I can't figure out who to call to find the
answers.
How can we (Digital) sent two communications - one to my home and
one at work - both mentioning this option without explaining HOW
TO DO IT!
Worse yet, did I have this option last year and no one told me at all?
|
2747.2 | OPT-OUT | WMOIS::ZEINER | | Thu Oct 28 1993 16:08 | 1 |
| THE OPT_OUT IS FIGURED IN YOUR GROSS AND IS PART OF THE 8%
|
2747.3 | Call PSN 592-7500 | NEMAIL::YATES | | Fri Oct 29 1993 12:00 | 6 |
| re: last 2 notes
You shuld be able to get these questions answered by calling the
Personnel Service Network on DTN: 592-7500.
Hope this helps.
|
2747.4 | A response is coming... | CENPCS::BIRMINGHAM | Does anyone know who is in charge here... | Mon Nov 01 1993 13:42 | 7 |
| To all:
Barbara at PSN is investigating this issue and has promised to send
me E-mail by Friday. I will post her response here.
George :-)
|
2747.5 | What I found out... | CENPCS::BIRMINGHAM | Does anyone know who's in charge ? | Mon Nov 08 1993 11:17 | 17 |
|
It appears that when you OPT-OUT, that the $25.41 is added to the
base salary used to calculate your contribution to SAVE. So, if you are
contributing the maximum of 8%, then you are contributing 8% of Opt-Out
into SAVE.
I re-read the Health Care stuff, and the paperwork does seem to imply
that the Opt-Out funds could be sheltered completely, IN ADDITION TO your
normal SAVE contribution. Apparently that's not the case. I also had my
site personnel rep contact the SAVE folks, and it's the same story
there as well.
So it looks like the government wins again...! :-(
Regards,
George
|
2747.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Nov 08 1993 11:52 | 10 |
| Re: .5
> So it looks like the government wins again...! :-(
How do you figure this? The government doesn't get any of the money - 8%
(or whatever) goes into YOUR 401K, which is tax-exempt. I'd be glad for
any opportunity to increase contributions to my 401K, why aren't you?
Steve
|
2747.7 | The government always gets the better deal | CENPCS::BIRMINGHAM | Does anyone know who's in charge ? | Mon Nov 08 1993 13:14 | 9 |
| The government wins because they get more of my income in taxes - which
they will inevitably waste. And, I'll bet that they will figure out a way
to get rid of 401k's just like they did IRA's.
And, YES, I am glad to be able to add to my 401K contributions. That
extra $2.03 will really add up fast.
George
|
2747.8 | | RAINBO::PANDYA | | Tue Nov 09 1993 11:17 | 23 |
| -< Glass half empty Vs half full >-
Re:.7
I had similar questions about your question as .6 did.
1. How does the government win? YOU chose to opt out and hence retained
the same income you would have otherwise had. As a matter of fact, if
you chose not to opt out, the government provides you the benefit of
not being taxed (or lowering your tax bracket). You cant have the cake
and eat it too!
2. $2.03 added is that much added. The choice would have been not to add
even as much. So in effect, you are $2.03 richer/week...that is about
$105 per year. Can you not use that (however little) money esp since
this is being tax sheltered?
3. Even if the government got rid of the IRA's, whatever you saved till
the time they were available, is your retirement (tax deferred) money.
Look at the 401K's the same way.
I am happy with these choices...
Atul
|
2747.9 | | RAINBO::PANDYA | | Tue Nov 09 1993 11:19 | 7 |
| -< Wrong on item 1>-
Re:.8
Please ignore my point on item 1....my mistake!
Atul
|
2747.10 | | TLE::TOKLAS::FELDMAN | SDT Software Engineering Process Group | Tue Nov 09 1993 12:46 | 16 |
| re: .7
Is the elimination of IRAs in the new tax package? The belief
that IRAs were eliminated several years ago is a myth.
What did change a few years ago is that if your income exceeds a certain
amount, and you are covered by an employer-paid pension plan, then you
may not defer the tax on your contribution. Income earned by the IRA is
still tax deferred. This isn't quite as advantageous, and it does create
more bookkeeping work, but it is still an option worth considering.
For 1992, single taxpayers with incomes less than $25000, and married
taxpayers with incomes less than $40000 could defer taxes on their
entire IRA contribution.
Gary
|
2747.11 | You all missed the point here... | CENPCS::BIRMINGHAM | Does anyone know who's in charge ? | Tue Nov 09 1993 15:21 | 1 |
| Rat-hole... I'm outta here..!
|