Text Only
Search Special English

Saving More for Retirement

17 March 2006
Economics Report - Download MP3 audio clip
Economics Report - RealAudio audio clip
Listen to Economics Report audio clip

I’m Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Economics Report.

One of the most important questions a worker can ask is: “Will I have enough money for retirement?”

photoscom economy money US markets 150
For more than 30 years, Americans have used IRAs to increase retirement savings.
For more than thirty years, Americans have used individual retirement accounts, or IRAs, to increase retirement savings.  Today, there are several plans that let workers invest.  The plans also offer tax savings.

The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of nineteen seventy-four provided for the first IRAs.  It set rules for retirement plans run by big businesses.  Other measures provided for individuals who did not qualify for such plans, called pensions.

The first kind of IRA is now called a traditional IRA.  A worker can put up to four thousand dollars of his or her yearly earnings into a special account.  Workers over the age of fifty can invest four thousand five hundred dollars.  Unlike a pension, the saver controls the account and decides how it is invested. 

Money put in a traditional IRA is not taxed until it is withdrawn.  But, savings cannot be withdrawn before the account holder is fifty-nine and one-half years old.  If the money is withdrawn before that time, it is taxed like income and there is a ten percent fine.  The account holder must start withdrawals by age seventy and one-half or there also are fines. 

At first, IRAs were only for people not covered by pensions at work.  But in nineteen eighty-one, everyone could to open an IRA.  Six years later, congress banned highly paid individuals from claiming tax reductions.

A Roth IRA is a similar plan.  Workers can invest up to four thousand dollars of earnings yearly.  But there is no tax savings on the year’s earnings.  Instead, withdrawals from a Roth IRA are generally not taxed. 

Roth IRA withdrawals cannot start until the saver is fifty-nine and one half years old.  There are also fines for putting too much money in them.  But people over seventy can still invest.  

Small businesses can also set up a kind of IRA.  Simplified Employee Pensions, or SEP IRAs, have elements of both traditional IRAs and pensions. 

SEP IRAs are simple investment accounts controlled by the saver.  And, like pension plans, employers add money to them too.  Limits on these accounts are higher.  A worker and an employer can invest twenty-five percent of the employee’s yearly pay up to forty-two thousand dollars.  The money is not taxed until it is withdrawn.

This VOA Special English Economics Report was written by Mario Ritter.  I'm Steve Ember. Our reports are online at voaspecialenglish.com.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version
  Featured Story
City of Pittsburgh Enjoys Its Days in the Sun  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Health Insurance Eases Worries of Senegal's 'Market Women'  Audio Clip Available
Mary Cassatt, 1844-1926: She Broke Social Barriers With her Art  Audio Clip Available
Words And Their Stories: Hold Your Horses!  Audio Clip Available
Poor Nations Get G8 Promise of $20 Billion Toward Food Security  Audio Clip Available
How Did He Do It? Lakers Coach Phil Jackson and His 10 NBA Titles  Audio Clip Available
Does US Need a Second Stimulus Plan?  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: Hopes, Fears and the Election of 1860  Audio Clip Available
Studying in the US: From 'In Loco Parentis' to 'Partnership'  Audio Clip Available
Race to the Moon: NASA and the Early Apollo Flights of the 1960s  Audio Clip Available
Experts Urge Limits on Widely Used Pain Drug  Audio Clip Available
Could Typhoons Help to Prevent Severe Quakes?  Audio Clip Available
Yard Work: When People Choose Sod Over Seed  Audio Clip Available