Definition and Core Concept
This article defines Retirement Planning as the process of determining income goals at retirement and the actions needed to achieve those goals through savings, investments, and employer-sponsored plans. Core account types: (1) 401(k) / 403(b) – employer-sponsored, pre-tax contributions, potential employer match, (2) Traditional IRA – individual pre-tax contributions (income limits for deduction), (3) Roth IRA – after-tax contributions, tax-free qualified withdrawals, (4) Pension plans (defined benefit) – employer guarantees lifetime income based on salary and years of service. The article addresses: objectives of retirement planning; key concepts including contribution limits, catch-up contributions, and required minimum distributions (RMDs); core mechanisms such as employer matching, vesting schedules, and rollovers; international comparisons and debated issues (Social Security sustainability, pension underfunding, retirement age); summary and emerging trends (target-date funds, Roth 401(k), decumulation products); and a Q&A section.
1. Specific Aims of This Article
This article describes retirement planning without endorsing specific providers. Objectives commonly cited: ensuring adequate income replacement (typically 70-80% of pre-retirement income), maintaining standard of living, and managing longevity risk.
2. Foundational Conceptual Explanations
Key terminology:
- Employer match (401(k)): Employer contributes additional amount up to a percentage of salary (e.g., 50% of employee contributions up to 6% of salary). Free money; should be maximised.
- Vesting schedule: Time required before employer contributions belong to employee. Immediate, graded (20%/year), or cliff (100% after 3 years).
- Required minimum distribution (RMD): Mandatory withdrawal from traditional IRAs and 401(k)s starting at age 73 (US). Roth IRAs have no RMD.
- Catch-up contribution: Additional contributions allowed for age 50+ (2025: 7,500for401(k),7,500for401(k),1,000 for IRA).
2025 contribution limits (US):
| Account | Under 50 | Age 50+ catch-up |
|---|---|---|
| 401(k), 403(b), 457(b) | $23,000 | $30,500 |
| Traditional/Roth IRA | $7,000 | $8,000 |
| SIMPLE IRA | $16,000 | $19,500 |
3. Core Mechanisms and In-Depth Elaboration
401(k) vs Roth 401(k):
- Traditional 401(k): Pre-tax contributions reduce current taxable income. Taxed upon withdrawal (including growth).
- Roth 401(k): After-tax contributions, tax-free qualified withdrawals (after age 59.5, account open 5 years).
Roth vs Traditional IRA:
| Feature | Traditional IRA | Roth IRA |
|---|---|---|
| Tax treatment | Pre-tax | After-tax |
| Withdrawals (retirement) | Taxable | Tax-free |
| RMDs | Yes (age 73) | No |
| Income limits for contribution | Yes (deduction) | Yes (contribution) |
Pension plans (defined benefit):
- Calculate benefit using formula: (years of service) × (multiplier, e.g., 1.5%) × (average final salary).
- Employer bears investment risk. Many private pensions replaced by 401(k)s; public sector (teachers, police, fire) still have pensions.
Retirement withdrawal strategies (4% rule): Withdraw 4% of portfolio first year, adjust for inflation annually. Historically lasted 30 years with 95% success rate (50/50 stock/bond).
4. International Comparisons and Debated Issues
Retirement systems (selected countries):
| Country | Public pension | Private pension | Retirement age |
|---|---|---|---|
| US | Social Security | 401(k), IRA | 67 (full) |
| UK | State Pension | Workplace pension (auto-enrolment) | 66 (rising to 68) |
| Australia | Superannuation (mandatory 11.5% employer) | Personal contributions | 67 |
| Canada | CPP, OAS | RRSP | 65 |
Debated issues:
- Social Security sustainability: Trust fund projected depleted by 2034-2035, then benefits reduced to 70-80% of scheduled. Solutions: raise retirement age, increase payroll tax, means-testing.
- Pension underfunding (public sector): Many state and local pensions (US) have unfunded liabilities. States use investment return assumptions (7-8%) that may be optimistic.
- RMD age increases (from 70.5 to 73, scheduled to 75 by 2033): Allows longer tax-deferred growth.
5. Summary and Future Trajectories
Summary: Maximise employer match first, then Roth IRA (for tax-free growth), then additional 401(k) contributions. Target retirement income 70-80% of pre-retirement earnings. 4% withdrawal rule provides planning guideline. RMDs apply to traditional accounts starting age 73.
Emerging trends:
- Target-date funds (automatic asset allocation shifting conservative with age).
- Roth 401(k) availability increasing.
- Decumulation products (longevity annuities, managed payout funds).
6. Question-and-Answer Session
Q1: Should I prioritise Roth or Traditional 401(k)?
A: Roth if current tax rate lower than expected retirement tax rate (likely for early career). Traditional if current rate higher than expected retirement rate (high earner near retirement). Many use mix.
Q2: What happens to my 401(k) when I change jobs?
A: Four options: leave with former employer (if balance >$5,000), roll over to new employer’s 401(k), roll over to IRA (most flexibility), cash out (not recommended – taxes + penalty).
Q3: Can I contribute to both 401(k) and IRA in same year?
A: Yes. Contribution limits are separate. 401(k): 23,000;IRA:23,000;IRA:7,000. High earners may not deduct Traditional IRA contributions if covered by workplace plan (Roth IRA income limits apply).