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MYBLACKJACKET.COM
- ARTICLE 2007:

An
IRA for you - and your spouse too
Now,
as to the question of whether you both can
do Roth IRAs - with you providing the money
for your nonworking spouse's contribution
- the answer is yes, assuming you meet two
requirements. First, you must have enough
taxable compensation to fund both your contribution
as well as your wife's. The max you can
contribute to a Roth IRA this year is $4,000,
plus another $1,000 if you're 50 or older.
Next year, the max rises to $5,000.
So
assuming you and your wife are under 50,
you would need compensation income of at
least $8,000 this year to contribute the
max for both of you. The money doesn't specifically
have to come from your paycheck. As an extreme
example, if you earned only $8,000 and spent
it on living expenses but had $8,000 in
a savings account, you could transfer the
money from savings into the Roth.
Ah,
but as I mentioned before, there is a second
requirement - namely, to make the maximum
contribution for 2007, the modified adjusted
gross income on your joint return must be
$156,000 or less. You can make a partial
contribution if your income is between $156,000
and $166,000. (For an explanation of what
that mouthful of a term "modified adjusted
gross income" means, click
here. And for the income limits for
singles and married couples not filing jointly,
click
here.)
By
the way, things get much more complicated
if you and your wife wish to do a traditional
deductible IRA. That's because Congress,
in its wisdom, has come up with a Byzantine
set of rules that limit your ability to
contribute to a deductible IRA depending
on a number of factors, including your income
and whether one or both of you is covered
by a retirement plan at work. Rather than
bore you with all the permutations, I'll
just refer you to this easy-to-use calculator.
Just
plug in a few simple pieces of information
about yourself and your spouse, and voila!
You automatically see which type of IRA
you can fund and how large a contribution
you can make. (I'm sure I don't have to
tell you that the $4,000 max refers to the
total contribution you and your wife can
make this year. In other words, even if
you qualify for both a Roth and a deductible
IRA, you and your wife can't throw $4,000
in each, although you both could split $4,000
between a Roth and a deductible.)
Of
course, you can argue back and forth whether
you're better off doing a traditional deductible
IRA or a Roth. My position is that doing
either is usually better than doing neither.
If
you really think you're likely to fall into
a lower tax bracket in retirement, then
theoretically at least, the deductible IRA
is the better choice since you're avoiding
paying taxes on your contribution when your
tax rate is higher and you're paying the
tax on your withdrawals at a lower rate.
The opposite is true with a Roth. But a
Roth has a few other advantages, which you
can learn about by clicking
here.
If
you're contributing faithfully to a 401(k)
- which means all the pre-tax contributions
and earnings in your account will be taxed
at ordinary income rates when you withdraw
your money in retirement - I think it's
generally a good thing to also have a Roth
IRA from which you can draw money tax-free.
(For more on the benefits of what I like
to call "tax diversification,"
click
here.
Whichever
version (or versions) of IRA you go with,
I think it's an excellent idea to fund them
for both you and your wife. Think of it
this way. If you invest $4,000 in an IRA
this year and then do $5,000 each year for
the next 20 years, you would have an account
balance of just over $267,000, assuming
an 8 percent return each year. Not bad.
But
if you do the same for your wife, you're
talking about a combined value of $535,000,
more than half a million bucks. That can
make a huge difference in your retirement
lifestyle, especially if you're also contributing
(as I hope you are) to your 401(k) or other
company plan. 
To
arrange a mortgage planning consultation
on strategies discussed in this article,
please call MYBLACKJACKET.COM
at (949) 481-9026
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