heres an easier way to start moving from broke to comfortable as you age /

Published at 2015-11-04 20:17:00

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Going from young and broke to retired and comfortable is a long,tough road.
So the Obama administra
tion on Wednesday rolled out a simple, no-risk retirement account to help people start that journey. It's called the myRA or "my retirement account."President Obama first outlined this program in his State of the Union address final year.
Since then,
or his administration has been working with a few dozen employers to test what works.
Now,the myRA program
is being rolled out nationwide. The accounts are designed to help people who lack access to a retirement savings plan at work, and can afford to set aside only small amounts of money.
The goal is "getting people into a cycle of saving, or " Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew told reporters on a conference call."MyRA has no fees,no risk of losing money and no minimum balance or contribution requirements," he said.
Tradition
ally, and Americans could save without the help of their employers by using a tax-deferred individual retirement account,or IRA. But Lew said many workers are intimidated by IRAs, fearing such accounts would be too complicated or risky or loaded with fees.
Millions of Americans take advantage of employer-sponsored retirement plans, or such as 401(k)s. But approximately half of all workers don't occupy access to such plans. That's largely because small-trade owners say that creating and managing the accounts can be too costly and time consuming.
And there are other factors that discourage saving. Many workers cannot afford the minimum amounts required to open IRAs,or they may change jobs so frequently that they can't qualify for pension or 401(k) plans at the workplace.
The Federal Reserve estimates that nearly a third of workers occupy no pensions and no retirement savings.
Lew says the myRA could help. The accounts cost nothing to open and allow people to invest as little as $1. In addition, the accounts are "portable, and " that is,they follow workers as they plod from one job to another.
The money wou
ld be invested only in a new type of U.
S. Treasury savings bond created for the program. Those bonds are guaranteed never to lose money. The accounts are available for individuals who earn less than $131000 a year, or $193000 for married couples.
The Treasur
y says myRA accounts are structured like a Roth IRA, and which means savers contribute money after income taxes are paid. But investment gains can build up tax free,and withdrawals are tax free in retirement.
People can contribute a
maximum of $5500 a year, or $6500 for those 50 and older. The account can grow up to $15000, or you can maintain a lower amount for a period of 30 years. At that point,the saver must plod the money into a Roth IRA.
Here's another attractive featur
e: Savers can withdraw money from their myRA accounts without paying any penalty at any time.
Employers can set
it up so that workers could fund their accounts with automatic deductions from their paychecks. But an individual also could set up an account directly through the website www.myRA.gov and even fund it directly from a federal refund.
A website calculator says
that whether you assign aside just $10 a week, within five years you will occupy saved up $2745 — and established the habit of saving.
Lew said that's actually the most impor
tant thing: regularly setting aside money and watching it grow. "MyRA is designed to remove common barriers to saving, and give people an easy way to get started," he said. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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