Several Factors Determine Tax Benefits of Deferrals

September 17, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) Individuals’ ages are typically more important than their marginal tax rates in determining how much they benefit from deferred taxation of compensation contributed to employer-provided retirement plans.

According to a study released by the Investment Company Institute (ICI), “The Tax Benefits and Revenue Costs of Tax Deferral,” in realistic simulations for a variety of investments, the tax benefits from a one-time $1 contribution to a retirement account are greater for a 45-year-old with a 15% marginal tax rate than for a 60-year-old in the 35% tax bracket.  

Analysts who write about tax policy frequently equate the tax treatment of retirement savings to that of employer-paid health benefits (which are excluded from income) and mortgage interest (which is deducted from income). As a result, they assert that a taxpayer in the 35% tax bracket receives 3.5 times as much tax benefit from deferring $1 in income than would a taxpayer in the 10% bracket.  

The ICI study, however, points out an important difference: Unlike income that is excluded or deducted, deferred income is eventually subjected to tax when it is withdrawn from a retirement account. Because of this difference, the benefits of tax deferral cannot be calculated in the same manner used to determine the benefits of an exclusion or deduction—by simply multiplying the amount of the exclusion or deduction by the individual’s marginal tax rate. For tax-deferred retirement investments, according to the study, the benefits calculation is not just a function of the individual’s marginal tax rate. Rather, one must assess the effects of deferral over time.

The study shows that, ultimately, tax deferral is roughly equivalent to exempting from tax the investment income earned on retirement contributions. In addition, the study illustrates that the relationship between marginal tax rates and the tax benefits of deferral is complex. In general, the benefits of tax deferral (and the revenue costs) do not increase proportionately with individuals’ marginal tax rates, and can actually decline as marginal tax rates increase. For example, if $1 of compensation were contributed to a retirement plan and invested in corporate stocks, then all else being equal, an individual subject to a 25% marginal tax rate typically would benefit more from the deferral of tax than would an individual with a 35% marginal tax rate.  

“Marginal tax rates are just one among a number of factors that influence the tax benefits of contributing to retirement accounts. Other factors include the length of time contributions remain invested, the rate of return earned on investments, and the type of investment income generated,” said Peter Brady, ICI senior economist and author of the study. “As Congress considers tax reform next year, it is critical that policymakers understand the true nature of the benefits that retirement savers get from tax deferral.”  

The study is one in a series designed to examine the tax treatment of contributions to employer-provided retirement plans and individual retirement accounts (IRAs). A forthcoming paper will analyze the lifetime benefits of tax-deferred savings for individuals with various levels of lifetime income.  

The study report is at http://www.ici.org/pdf/ppr_12_tax_benefits.pdf.

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