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Government-sponsored Plans: The largest government-sponsored retirement plan is the Social Security plan .
Personal Plans: The most popular example is the Individual Retirement Agreement or IRA, which can come in different types according to their tax treatment .
Annuities: These are contracts established with an insurance company; there are fixed and variable annuities .
Employer-sponsored Plans: The two types of employer-sponsored retirement plans are qualified and non-qualified retirement plans. Qualified retirement plans meet the Internal Revenue Code requirements and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) requirements. These plans offer several tax benefits: they allow employers to deduct annual allowable contributions for each participant; contributions and earnings on those contributions are tax-deferred until withdrawn for each participant; and some of the taxes can be deferred even further through a transfer into a different type of IRA. Non-qualified retirement plans are those plans that either do not meet the IRS Code requirements or the ERISA requirements.
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Qualified Plans
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Defined benefit plans are company retirement plans, such as pension plans, in which a retired employee receives a specific amount based on salary history and years of service, and in which the employer bears the investment risk. The employee, the employer, or both may make contributions. The maximum amount a participant can contribute each year is the smaller of $160,000 or the average compensations from the three highest consecutive calendar years. These plans are better for people who have 20 years until retirement or less, since the annual contributions can be larger.
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Pensions are a type of retirement plan that guarantees a specific amount
Annuities are defined benefit plans that have fixed monthly payments at the age of retirement. Note that annuities cannot be transferred into an IRA account, so the amount is taxed as regular income the year it is received. There are different options:
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Joint and 50%: The annuity is paid for life and after death, with the spouse receiving half of the amount for the rest of his or her life.
Joint and 66 2/3%: The annuity is paid for life and after death, with the spouse receiving two thirds of that amount for the rest of his or her life.
Joint and 100%: The annuity is paid for life and after death, with the spouse receiving the full amount for the rest of his or her life.
10-year certain & life: The annuity is paid for life; if the participant dies in the first 10 years of retirement, the beneficiary collects the same amount until reaching the 10th year of retirement at which point all payments stop. If the participant dies 10 years or more after retirement, the payments stop at the time of the death.
Life Only: The annuity is paid for life, and after death all payments stop.
Lump sum: The participant can take the total cash value of the retirement plan.
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Profit sharing: An employer alone makes contributions based
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Contributions: Employers can decide what amount and whether to contribute to the plan each year. The maximum that the employer can contribute is 15% whichever is less. In addition, contributions can only be made on the first $170,000.
Eligibility: Employees can be eligible to participate in the plan immediately or after one or two years of employment; the vesting schedule is up to six years.
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Contributions: The maximum that the employer can contribute is 25% of the participant's compensation or $40,000, whichever is less. In addition, contributions can only be made on the first $200,000. Unless the plan is integrated with Social Security, all employees' contribution must be the same percentage and must be made every year.
Eligibility: Employees can be eligible to participate in the plan immediately or after one or two years of employment; as with profit sharing plans, employees must be 100% vested in the plan.
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Contributions: The total percentage for contributions in a combined plan cannot be more than the lesser of 100% of compensation or $40,000, and no more than 25% can be contributed to the profit sharing plan.
Eligibility: Employees can be eligible to participate in the combination plan immediately, or after one or two years of employment; if employees are not allowed to enroll immediately, those participants must be 100% vested at all times.
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457 plans are aimed at state and local government employees of tax-exempt organizations. In 2003, participants can defer up to $12,000 of their annual income, and contributions and earnings are tax-deferred until withdrawal. Distributions start at retirement age but participants can also take distributions if they change jobs or if they have an emergency, including death. Participants can choose to take distributions as a lump sum, annual installments or as an annuity. Distributions are subject to ordinary income taxes and the amounts cannot be transferred into an IRA.

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