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#4
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| Steven wrote: - quote - > Can't a small business owner always give him/herslef extra salary and
As Cal notes, the problem is that that salary would be> put the extra into a personal annuity policy and reach the same > effectiveness? Wouldn't this way help the employer to avoid giving the > benefit to qualified employees? immediately taxable to the owner/employee, while the amount that goes into a defined benefit pension plan (whether funded with insurance in a 412(i) plan or just a vanilla trust plan with an actuarial valuation) is not currently taxable to the owner. Tax is not imposed until benefits are received from the plan, normally many years later with all of the benefits of deferral. Now, that said, the advantage of not using a qualified plan is that you can discriminate at will. So you can fund only for yourself, though you will give up the current tax benefit of no current tax on the individual. So, frankly, it becomes a "balancing act" of looking at the employee and administrative costs imposed by a qualified plan vs. the overall tax benefit of the plan to the owner. If the expenses are low enough, it makes sense to go the qualified route. Now, that said, there are a number of qualified plan options, including various defined contribution structures that may work better if the ages of those that would be covered make a defined benefit plan unworkable. Finally, when looking at a 412(i) plan, be suspicious if the only thing the promoter talks about is the large current tax deduction and never talks about the overall investment performance of this policy. While a larger contribution clearly gets a larger tax deduction, I point out to clients that *I* can eliminate any tax in their corporation as well by simply charging an outrageous accounting fee <grin> . Make sure if you go for a 412(i) plan that the underlying insurance product is one that makes sense and that your contribution does eventually result in more money in your pocket than would going without. I say that only because I've seen presentations for 412(i) plans where the "current tax deduction" was the benefit that was being hammered home, without regard for whether that wonderful deduction existed only because we have a policy with incredibly high expenses. And, as well, you should compare a 412(i) plan against the trust alternative, where investments are simply held by the plan trust and the amount of contribution is actuarially determined each year. I'll put it this way--generally a number of qualified plan options should be considered before "settling in" on one--and beware of anyone that claims to have the "magic bullet" that works in all cases. In the qualified plan arena, minor changes in facts can result in a very different plan being the best fit. -- Ed Zollars, CPA Phoenix, Arizona |
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#3
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| Steven wrote: - quote - > Hi BMS,
Yes, it is a deductible expense to the BUSINESS,> Thank you for answering my questions. > But isn't employee salary also business expense, therefore deductible? but at the same time, it a TAXABLE income to the recipient........ - quote - > Can't a small business owner always give him/herslef extra salary and
Obviously NO........although there is absolutely> put the extra into a personal annuity policy and reach the same > effectiveness? nothing wrong with owning a personal annuity.. Wouldn't this way help the employer to avoid giving the - quote - > benefit to qualified employees? YES, but at a very high unneccesary EXPENSE to himself. - quote - > Cal Lester CLU
Bills travel through the mail at twice the speed of checksThis signature file is generated by Pick-a-Tag ! Written by jeroen[at]vanbaarsel.net |
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#2
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| Hi BMS, Thank you for answering my questions. But isn't employee salary also business expense, therefore deductible? Can't a small business owner always give him/herslef extra salary and put the extra into a personal annuity policy and reach the same effectiveness? Wouldn't this way help the employer to avoid giving the benefit to qualified employees? Steven "BMS" <mcfared[at]comcast.net> wrote in message news:<HXUeb.19263$%h1.10958[at]sccrnsc02> ... - quote - > First it's a business deduction. > It's deferred compensation. Pay your taxes later. > The cash value, since it has to be in a guaranteed product like life > insurance, can be rolled over later into an IRA. > What hassles? > "Steven" <inner_light[at]hotmail.com> wrote in message > news:9d1fde44.0310012127.727bd96e[at]posting.google.com... > > Hi everyone, > > > I am new here. I have a question regarding defined benefit plan > > 412(i) for small businesses. I have heard about many good things about > > it. Especially, if the business has very few employees and the owner > > is older, then the owner will be able to use the before tax dollar to > > build retirement fund in a relatively shorter period of time. But why > > would an owner want to go through all the hassels if he can just raise > > his own salary and fund the extra money into a personal policy? |
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#1
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| Steven wrote: - quote - > Hi everyone, > I am new here. I have a question regarding defined benefit plan > 412(i) for small businesses. I have heard about many good things about > it. Especially, if the business has very few employees and the owner > is older, then the owner will be able to use the before tax dollar to > build retirement fund in a relatively shorter period of time. But why > would an owner want to go through all the hassels if he can just raise > his own salary and fund the extra money into a personal policy? Tax dedudtibility of contribution and non-taxable growth while in the plan...... Cal Lester CLU -- Bills travel through the mail at twice the speed of checks This signature file is generated by Pick-a-Tag ! Written by jeroen[at]vanbaarsel.net |
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| First it's a business deduction. It's deferred compensation. Pay your taxes later. The cash value, since it has to be in a guaranteed product like life insurance, can be rolled over later into an IRA. What hassles? "Steven" <inner_light[at]hotmail.com> wrote in message news:9d1fde44.0310012127.727bd96e[at]posting.google.com... - quote - > Hi everyone, > I am new here. I have a question regarding defined benefit plan > 412(i) for small businesses. I have heard about many good things about > it. Especially, if the business has very few employees and the owner > is older, then the owner will be able to use the before tax dollar to > build retirement fund in a relatively shorter period of time. But why > would an owner want to go through all the hassels if he can just raise > his own salary and fund the extra money into a personal policy? |
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#-1
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| Hi everyone, I am new here. I have a question regarding defined benefit plan 412(i) for small businesses. I have heard about many good things about it. Especially, if the business has very few employees and the owner is older, then the owner will be able to use the before tax dollar to build retirement fund in a relatively shorter period of time. But why would an owner want to go through all the hassels if he can just raise his own salary and fund the extra money into a personal policy? |
| Tags |
| benefit, defined, plan |
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