Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medical. Show all posts

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Retirement May Mean a Lifestyle Downgrade

With the baby boomers reaching retirement age, many of them are looking forward to settling into a nice, comfortable retirement. However, a new report from the Employee Benefit Research Institute suggests that more than half of these baby boomers are at risk of having insufficient funds to pay for the full extent of their retirement expenses.

Nearly half of older boomers -- those now aged 56 to 62 -- and some 44% of younger boomers -- aged 46 to 55 now -- are at risk of not having sufficient income to pay for basic retirement expenses and uninsured medical expenses, according to the study.

The study, which assumed that boomers would retire at age 65, also found that lower-income retirees are most likely to run out of money after 10 and certainly 20 years of retirement, while higher-income retirees are least likely to run out of money.

41% of those with the lowest income are likely to run short of money after 10 years of retirement, and 57% after 20 years. Meanwhile, just 5% of those in the highest income quartile will run out of money after 10 years, and 13% after 20 years.

So, what to make of this study?

Run out of lifestyle, not money

In reality, most Americans don't run out of money, they run out of lifestyle. As they age and spend down their assets, they typically reduce their living standard.

Continue reading at Market Watch.com…

Wednesday, June 02, 2010

US Supreme Court To Consider Tax Rule On Medical Residents

Yesterday, the U.S Supreme Court decided they would hear a case regarding the payment of social security taxes for students of medical colleges and teaching hospitals. As the Wall Street Journal explains, the law being challenged is an old Treasury Department rule asserting that medical residents and other "full-time employees" cannot qualify for the general student exemption from Social Security taxes.

At stake is the tax treatment of medical residents nationwide, of which there are currently about 100,000, and $700 million in annual revenue to the federal government, according to court papers.

The Mayo Clinic and the University of Minnesota challenged the Treasury ruling and have also sought refunds for Social Security taxes they already paid on behalf of medical residents.

The St. Louis-based 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the IRS in a ruling last June.

In their petition to the Supreme Court, the Mayo Clinic and University of Minnesota said four other federal appeals courts have sided with hospitals against the government on the issue. That leaves medical residents in the 8th Circuit--which covers Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota--subject to taxes that their peers elsewhere in the U.S. do not have to pay, they argued.

The Social Security tax represents 12.4% of wages. Half of the tax is paid by the employer and half by the employee. For a medical resident earning a $50,000 stipend, that represents $3,100 paid by the resident and $3,100 paid by the hospital.

Continue reading at Wall Street Journal.com…

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