Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.
Ok? We don’t drag everyone else down because someone else’s employer doesn’t offer a 401k. That’s why IRAs were instituted. Or you could pass legislation requiring all employers to provide 401k access, the same as health insurance.
Crappy companies many employees can’t afford to contribute or they offer them but no match. Or the scam in high turnover retail give a match but do vesting period which 95 percent of retail store employees never get.
Also the match is worth more the more you make. A high earner in San Fran or NYC is in 40 percent tax bracket
The low income retail worker in Florida is in zero percent tax bracket.
Why does the high earner get a 40 percent tax saving on their contribution but low income a zero tax saving?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, let’s just impose communism at this point.
You don’t even need 401k. Setup your own IRA.
Maybe states shouldn’t tax the crap out of people so much and they wouldn’t move in retirement? Get your taxes under control, dimwits.
States don't "tax the crap out of people." Get a grip.
America is a low-tax jurisdiction in the world. We're a bloody tax haven, in fact.
Tell people in IL, NJ, CA, or NY their state isn’t taxing the crap out of them. Clearly you’ve never lived in a state like NJ imposing $10k property taxes for a modest $450k home.
I’d sock as much money away as possible in a 401k to avoid stupid state taxes in dumb states like IL/CA/NJ for 30+ and then move to the lowest tax state possible to avoid decades or of paying for dumb democrat/progressive ideas.
The liberal bastion of Texas has the 6th highest property tax rate in the US. Keep that in mind while you rant about stupid and dumb states.
No income tax tho, dimwit.
Hey dimwit, high property taxes can easily make up for low state income taxes. Try holding up a mirror.
Anonymous wrote:NYC top tax rate is 14.7 perfect. A dual income NYC couple is putting 60k into 401k. NYC losing out on $8,800 a year on taxes. But wait all those dividends and bond interest in 401k NYC should also be taxing.
Then that rich couple moves to Florida prior to RMDs and completely avoids any NYC tax
That same couple, their nanny, maid etc they would laugh in their face if they asked for a 401k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:44 percent of employees have no access to a 401k.
And IRAs have lower contribution limits and no
match.
You can choose to work a job that has a 401K with a match if it matters to you.
Anonymous wrote:44 percent of employees have no access to a 401k.
And IRAs have lower contribution limits and no
match.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.
Ok? We don’t drag everyone else down because someone else’s employer doesn’t offer a 401k. That’s why IRAs were instituted. Or you could pass legislation requiring all employers to provide 401k access, the same as health insurance.
Crappy companies many employees can’t afford to contribute or they offer them but no match. Or the scam in high turnover retail give a match but do vesting period which 95 percent of retail store employees never get.
Also the match is worth more the more you make. A high earner in San Fran or NYC is in 40 percent tax bracket
The low income retail worker in Florida is in zero percent tax bracket.
Why does the high earner get a 40 percent tax saving on their contribution but low income a zero tax saving?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.
Ok? We don’t drag everyone else down because someone else’s employer doesn’t offer a 401k. That’s why IRAs were instituted. Or you could pass legislation requiring all employers to provide 401k access, the same as health insurance.
Crappy companies many employees can’t afford to contribute or they offer them but no match. Or the scam in high turnover retail give a match but do vesting period which 95 percent of retail store employees never get.
Also the match is worth more the more you make. A high earner in San Fran or NYC is in 40 percent tax bracket
The low income retail worker in Florida is in zero percent tax bracket.
Why does the high earner get a 40 percent tax saving on their contribution but low income a zero tax saving?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.
Ok? We don’t drag everyone else down because someone else’s employer doesn’t offer a 401k. That’s why IRAs were instituted. Or you could pass legislation requiring all employers to provide 401k access, the same as health insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.
Ok? We don’t drag everyone else down because someone else’s employer doesn’t offer a 401k. That’s why IRAs were instituted. Or you could pass legislation requiring all employers to provide 401k access, the same as health insurance.
Crappy companies many employees can’t afford to contribute or they offer them but no match. Or the scam in high turnover retail give a match but do vesting period which 95 percent of retail store employees never get.
Also the match is worth more the more you make. A high earner in San Fran or NYC is in 40 percent tax bracket
The low income retail worker in Florida is in zero percent tax bracket.
Why does the high earner get a 40 percent tax saving on their contribution but low income a zero tax saving?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.
Ok? We don’t drag everyone else down because someone else’s employer doesn’t offer a 401k. That’s why IRAs were instituted. Or you could pass legislation requiring all employers to provide 401k access, the same as health insurance.
Crappy companies many employees can’t afford to contribute or they offer them but no match. Or the scam in high turnover retail give a match but do vesting period which 95 percent of retail store employees never get.
Also the match is worth more the more you make. A high earner in San Fran or NYC is in 40 percent tax bracket
The low income retail worker in Florida is in zero percent tax bracket.
Why does the high earner get a 40 percent tax saving on their contribution but low income a zero tax saving?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.
Ok? We don’t drag everyone else down because someone else’s employer doesn’t offer a 401k. That’s why IRAs were instituted. Or you could pass legislation requiring all employers to provide 401k access, the same as health insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Ymillions of Americans don’t take advantage of tax-favored retirement savings − or can't. Nearly half of workers have no access to a retirement plan at work, according to one AARP analysis.