GW's Tax Increase
The deficit spending that the GOP has engaged in over the past six years has direct and immediate impacts on the American population. Everyone is talking about saddling future generations with taxes to pay the debt that has been incurred today, but Americans are having to pay the equivalent of higher taxes today to prevent themselves from being hit with even bigger taxes tomorrow to compensate for the deficit spending.
All financial advisors say that you need to start planning for your retirement as early as possible. The benefit of compound interest and maximizing your contributions to a 401(k) or IRA will assist in ensuring that you will be able to pay for your retirement when that day comes. If you do not start early, the compound interest will not have long enough to provide maximum benefits, and if you do not contribute enough money to the retirement plan, you will not get enough compounding to total the amount necessary for retirement. However, there is another element to this that is not being discussed: tomorrow's tax rate.
Today, you can put your money into a traditional 401(k) or IRA. Either allow you to deduct the contribution from your taxes. Thus, you get the benefit of saving pre-tax dollars and allowing the compounding effect to occur until you withdraw the money. When you withdraw the money after retirement, you will be required to pay tax on all the money withdrawn (contributions and earnings). The theory is that when you are working, you are going to be in a higher tax bracket than when you are retired and have no working income. This may not come true. Due to the deficit spending this administration has embarked on, when today's 30-somethings start retiring, Congress may need to significantly raise the tax rates to pay for the Social Security IOUs that have been accumulating since the Reagan Administration and crescendoing during this Administration as well as pay for all of the accumulated debt that has been incurred during the past six years. The end result is that today's tax benefit will become tomorrow's tax burden. Those who benefitted by deferring the tax consequences of the traditional 401(k) and IRA will get hit with a higher tax burden than if they had originally saved post-tax dollars.
Many retirement advisors are telling people to save money in a Roth IRA or the newly created Roth 401(k). These are post-tax dollars saved and when they are withdrawn no tax is paid. The net result is that people are having to pay more in taxes today, by not getting the tax deferred traditional retirement plans, so they can avoid having to pay the possible excruciatingly high tax that will be required tomorrow to pay for the fiscal mismanagement we are currently under.
No one explained to the tax payers that the tax cuts for the rich in 2001 and 2003 were going to immediately increase the tax burden of the middle class. This is the bait and switch in which the GOP consistently engages. Deceive the public into thinking that they will benefit by sending them a check for $300.00 and then increase their effective tax rate significantly, but don't tell them what you are doing until it is too late for them to stop you from giving significant benefits your rich country club buddies. Worse yet, most people do not have access to a Roth 401(k), so they cannot even protect themselves from getting hurt upon retirement. Shame on the Administration for continuing to undercut the middle class in this manner.
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