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- #EF
- #T15,4,LONG RANGE FINANCIAL PLANNING
- #C3,R5
- THE FINANCIAL PLANNER includes a program to assist you in long-range
- forecasting and planning for your financial future.
- #D1
-
- It is a very comprehensive program. In it, you can include every sig-
- nificant known factor affecting your financial status, and you can also
- include your best estimates of factors which are important to your fore-
- cast but which are not known precisely.
- #D2
- #BN,2,12,78,24,1,0,0,0,11,1
- ~C~ITHE FINANCIAL PLANNER takes into account all of the following:
- ∙ Wages (Self & Spouse)
- #D1
- ∙ Future Wages
- #D1
- ∙ Tax-Deferred Investments
- #D1
- ∙ Taxable Investments
- #D1
- ∙ Checking & Savings Accts
- #D1
- ∙ Lump-Sum Income
- #D1
- ∙ Lump-Sum Expenses
- #D1
- ∙ Mortgages
- #D1
- ∙ Property Taxes
- #D1
- ∙ Federal Income Tax
- #D1
- #C44,R14
- ∙ Pension Income
- #D1
- ∙ Social Security Income
- #D1
- ∙ Mortgages
- #D1
- ∙ Property Taxes
- #D1
- ∙ Federal Income Tax
- #D1
- ∙ Investment Earnings Rates
- #D1
- ∙ Cost-of-Living Adjustments
- #D1
- ∙ Inflation
- #D1
- ∙ Retirement Ages
- #D1
- ∙ Desired Retirement Income ~N
- #W
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- #EW
- #C3,R5
- USING THE PROGRAM
-
- The program presents a series of data input screens, (one for each major
- category of information), on which you enter all of the pertinent data for
- your particular circumstance.
- #D3
-
- When you have entered all data, the program then considers the interactions
- of all the factors listed on the previous screen in this Manual, and calc-
- ulates, ~K~W~Ifor as many years into the future as you have requested,~N~k the follow-
- ing projected data for each of those years:
- #D3
-
- Tax-Deferred Investments : ~C~IEarnings, Withdrawals, and Balance~N
- #D1
- Taxable Investments .... : ~C~IEarnings. Withdrawals, and Balance~N
- #D1
- Cash & Checking Accts... : ~C~IYear-end Cash Balance~N
- #D1
- Investment Income ...... : ~C~ITotal for the Year~N
- #D1
- Social Security Income.. : ~C~ITotal for the Year~N
- #D1
- Federal Income Taxes.... : ~C~ITotal for the Year~N
- #D1
- Net Spendable Income.... : ~C~ITotal for the year~N
- #D1
-
- Finally, the program provides printed summary and detailed annual reports.
- #WP
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- #EF
- #T15,4,WHAT THE PROGRAM DOES WITH YOUR DATA
- #C2,R5
- YOUR AGE(S)
-
- Federal Income Tax law has several age-related aspects. For example...
- #D1
-
-
- Age Impact
- #HH,1,11,7,1,14,1
- #HH,11,11,76,1,14,1
-
- 55 ~C~IAll or part of the profits on a home sale may be exempt from taxes.~N
- #D2
- 59-1/2 ~C~IIRA withdrawals before this age are subject to a 10% penalty.~N
- #D2
- 65 ~C~IStandard deductions are increased.~N
- #D2
- 70-1/2 ~C~IIRA withdrawals must begin no later than this age.~N
- #D2
- 70-1/2 ~C~IBeginning at 70-1/2, annual IRA withdrawals must be at least equal to
- amounts determined according to IRS actuarial tables based on your
- (and your spouse's) ages.~N
- #D2
-
- The program uses the age data you supply (along with the other financial trans-
- action data) to properly calculate the projected Federal Income Tax for each
- year in your plan.
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C2,R4
- YOUR TAX FILING STATUS
-
- Federal Income Tax rates, personal exemptions, and standard deduction
- amounts are determined by your tax filing status. The program selects the
- correct rates, exemptions and deductions to use in the analysis based on
- your filing status - <M> married filing jointly, <H> head of household, or
- <S>single.
- #D3
-
- #HS,2,12,79,21,0,3
- ~Z~cNOTE: The program assumes that your tax-filing status will not change
- during the years covered by your financial plan. For older people,
- (near or beyond retirement age), that's probably a good assumption.
-
- If it is not a good assumption in your case, and you know in which
- year a change in status will occur, you can simply split a forecast
- period in two parts: (1) now to the change date, and (2), change
- date to end of forecast period; and run the program twice, using the
- calculated ending position from the first part as the starting position
- for the second part.~N
- #D5
-
- (In fact, the ability to quickly make multiple program runs to compare what-if
- alternatives is a major feature of the program).
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C2,R5
-
-
- WAGES (SELF & SPOUSE)
-
- The program calculates expected future year wages based on your current wages
- and your estimate of your average annual increase, and for a spouse's wages.
- It adds these amounts to all other taxable income- beginning with the present
- year and continuing to your respective retirement dates.
-
- #HS,2,15,79,19,0,3
-
- ~Z~cNOTE: If you or your spouse anticipate receiving only occasional short
- term wages in a year (or a few years), either before or after retirement,
- you can most easily account for those additional periodic wages by entering
- them, year-by-year, in a later data entry screen titled "OTHER TAXABLE
- INCOME.~N
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C2,R5
- PENSIONS (SELF & SPOUSE)
-
-
- Most private and government pension plans will give you an estimate of the
- monthly payments you can expect at a specified age, assuming you continue to
- work until that age at your current wage.
-
-
- The program automatically includes these pension payments (for you and/or
- your spouse) to the total taxable income in the years after your respective
- retirement dates. (It also handles voluntary pension supplements, if your
- pension plan(s) provide them...and a few extraordinarily good plans do!).
- #D4
-
- #HS,2,18,79,23,0,3
- ~Z~cNOTE: Many plans base the pension amount on years of service and a percent
- of your final year's salary. Thus, the FINANCIAL PLANNER generated forecast,
- based on a pension keyed to your present salary, will be conservative. If you
- wish to make a less conservative forecast, you can adjust the pension estimate
- by the ratio of your anticipated final salary to your current salary, prior
- to entering that amount in the program.~N
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C2,R5
- SOCIAL SECURITY (SELF & SPOUSE)
-
- The Social Security Administration can give you an estimate of the Social
- Security payments you may expect starting at age 65 (or age 62) based
- upon your total Social Security contributions to date.
- #D3
-
-
- The FINANCIAL PLANNER program automatically adjusts this amount to an amount
- you might receive at your starting age (62 or 65) based on the assumption that
- you will continue working and contributing to Social Security until that age.
- #D3
-
-
- Also, the program adjusts on-going Social Security payments based on your
- estimate of the cost-of-living adjustments (COLA), if any, that may be made
- by the Social Security Administration in future years.
- #D3
-
- (It can probably be assumed that these adjustments will never be negative,
- and that they will never be greater (percent per year) than the average
- annual inflation)..
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C2,R5
- IRA ACCOUNTS, 401(k) ACCOUNTS, AND OTHER TAX-DEFERRED ACCOUNTS
-
- The program handles these savings accounts separately from any other savings
- savings or investments you may have--for several reasons.
- #D3
-
- First, they frequently produce earnings at a rate different than other
- savings and investments.
- #D2
-
- Second, they usually have a major earnings advantage over other savings
- and investments plans because their earnings are not taxed until withdrawn.
- (And, therefore, the program does not withdraw any of these funds to meet
- your projected expenses until all other sources of funds have been used up).
- #D3
-
- And third, the special IRS tax rules governing taxes on IRA funds (penalties
- on withdrawals before age 59-1/2, minimum withdrawals after age 70-1/2), etc.
- make it necessary to treat these funds separately.
- #D3
-
-
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- #EW
- #C2,R5
- OTHER (TAXABLE) INVESTMENTS
-
- The amount that any individual is allowed to invest in any year in tax-deferred
- retirement plans (IRA's, 401(k)'s, and SEP's) is limited by law.
- #D2
-
- Any remaining available investment funds are usually placed in currently tax-
- able investments. Examples are stocks, stock options, bonds, mutual funds,
- money market accounts, certificates of deposit, mortgages, private loans, and
- small business investments.
- #D3
-
- Earnings on these accounts are taxable in the year they are earned whether the
- earnings are withdrawn or are allowed to accumulate.
- #D2
-
-
- The program handles federal income taxes on these earnings accordingly.
-
- ~C~ITHE DATA ENTRY SCREEN FOR THESE INVESTMENTS IS TITLED "OTHER INVESTMENTS".
- YOU SHOULD TOTAL ALL SUCH INVESTMENTS IN ANY YEAR AND ENTER THAT TOTAL VALUE
- FOR EACH YEAR.~N
- #WP
-
-
-
- %
- #EW
- #C2,R5
- OTHER TAXABLE INCOME
-
-
- In addition to the regular taxable income already entered in the program -
- wages, earnings on investments or savings accounts, checking account
- interest, pension payments, and so forth - you may have (or expect to have)
- other taxable income, either regularly or irregularly occurring.
-
-
- Examples:
-
- Short-term wages after retirement (self and/or spouse), the taxable portion
- of profits on the sale of a home or other residence, taxable profits on the
- sale of other assets, etcetera..
-
-
- If you anticipate such income, you should enter the amount of each such item
- in the year(s) you expect to receive it.
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C2,R5
- OTHER NONTAXABLE INCOME (AND EXPENSES)
-
- You might also expect some major NONTAXABLE income (or expenses) in certain
- future years, in addition to the items already entered.
- #D2
-
- ~C~IExamples of possible nontaxable income:~N
- Refunds of savings plan contributions, cash value payouts from life insur-
- ance policies, inheritances, or the nontaxable portion of profits from a
- homesale.
-
-
- ~C~IExamples of possible significant one-time or short-term expenses:~N
- College tuition and expenses, graduation and wedding gifts, purchase of that
- dream boat, RV or automobile, or gifts to children for home down payments.
- #D5
-
- If you anticipate one or more significant nontaxable income or expense items
- such as these, you should enter the amount for each in the appropriate year
- on this data input screen.
-
- ~C~INOTE: Expense items must be entered as NEGATIVE amounts.~N
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C2,R4
- HOME MORTGAGES (AND PROPERTY TAXES)
-
- Mortgage interest payments and property taxes are frequently such large
- parts of annual expenses that they justify separate treatment. Both mortgage
- interest and property taxes are deductible from taxable income, and they may
- very well total more than the standard deduction allowed on income taxes.
- #D2
-
- The program therefore computes the interest included in your mortgage payments
- for each year, adjusts property taxes for yearly inflation, and uses these
- deductions rather than the standard deductions to calculate your annual income
- taxes in any plan year in which they exceed the standard deductions.
- #D3
- #HS,2,16,79,21,0,3
-
- ~Z~cNOTE: If you plan to sell a mortgaged property during any plan year, you
- should run the module "SELLING YOUR RESIDENCE" before running the PLANNING
- module. This will give you the taxable and non-taxable amounts you will
- realize from the planned sale. You should note down these amounts and enter
- them (for the appropriate year) in the "Other Taxable Income" and "Other Non-
- Taxable Income" sections of the PLANNER module when you run the PLANNER.~N
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C3,R9
- #HS,2,9,79,17,0,3
- ~Z~cNOTE: Because the tax laws allow interest deductions on no more than two
- homes, (your primary and secondary residences), the program does not allow
- you to input more than two mortgages.
-
- If you carry additional mortgages on investment or income property, the
- interest portions of these additional mortgage payments should be considered-
- for purposes of this program analysis- as business expenses to be deducted
- from business income before entering net taxable incomes in a later section
- of the program.~N
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C2,R5
-
-
- CASH ON HAND, INCLUDING CHECKING ACCOUNTS
-
-
- In this program, the term "Checking Accounts" means the combined total of
- all your easy-access funds - cash on hand, regular checking accounts, NOW
- accounts, regular bank or S&L savings accounts for relatively small amounts,
- etcetera.
-
- If a major portion of these funds earns interest, you can enter an average
- interest rate, which the program will apply to the total amount of all such
- funds. Thus, if you enter an interest rate, it should be conservatively
- estimated, and should always be somewhat less than the quoted rate on that
- portion which does actually earn interest.
- #WP
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- #C2,R5
- DESIRED ANNUAL SPENDABLE INCOME
-
-
- For many people, one of the over-riding objectives of their working careers
- is to earn enough, and to invest their savings well enough, to be able to
- enjoy a desired standard of living in their retirement. That standard, at
- least in terms of physical comfort and security, usually translates into a
- specific annual spendable (after tax) income.
-
-
- That spendable amount will probably increase slightly each year, as inflation
- gradually erodes the purchasing value of the dollar.
-
-
- And many people may have at least one sudden shift in the amount desired --
- when they move from an owned residence to rental quarters, or vice versa.
-
-
- The final data input screen in THE FINANCIAL PLANNER program asks you to
- enter information on these items.
- #WP
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- #EF
- #T15,4,PROGRAM CALCULATIONS
- #C3,R5
-
-
-
-
- The next few screens tell you a little of what THE FINANCIAL PLANNER does in
- using the data you supply. Among other things, the program:
- #D2
-
-
- ~C~I- Selects the appropriate Federal Tax Tables.
- #D1
-
- - Adjusts each year's tax brackets, personal exemptions, and standard
- deductions for your projected inflation rate.
- #D1
-
- - Selects the appropriate Life Expectancy Multiples from IRS Tables (for use
- in calculating minimum IRA withdrawals each year after age 70-1/2.~N
- #W
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- %
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- #C3,R5
-
-
-
-
- Then, for the current year and ~Kfor every succeeding year:~k
-
-
- ~C~I- Calculates earnings on your IRA accounts, investment accounts, and checking
- accounts.
-
- - Sums all anticipated income and expenses
-
- - Calculates Federal income tax.~N
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C3,R5
-
-
- If the year's current income (excluding investment earnings) is ~C~IMORE~N than
- the year's total expenses - (including Federal income taxes) - the program
- first allocates part of the excess to increase your checking account balance
- for the effect of inflation, and then it allocates the remaining excess to
- your taxable investment accounts.
- #D5
-
- If the year's current income is ~C~ILESS~N than total expenses - it covers the
- shortfall first by using any remaining checking account balance above your
- specified minimum; and then uses any remaining funds in your taxable invest-
- ment accounts. If the shortfall is still not covered, the program then uses
- the necessary funds from your IRA accounts.
- #D5
-
-
- ~C~I(If the latter becomes necessary, the program recalculates your income
- tax for that year, including a penalty if under age 59-1/2, and withdraws
- the funds to cover the extra tax from the IRA account).~N
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C3,R5
- WHAT THE PROGRAM DOES
- AFTER IT HAS ALL YOUR DATA
-
- Further:
-
- -- If you are age 70-1/2 or older in a given year, the program also computes
- minimum IRA withdrawals. If the IRA withdrawal otherwise needed to meet
- expenses would have been zero or less than the calculated minimum, the program
- withdraws the legally required additional amount, recalculates your
- income tax once again, pays the tax, and adds the remainder of the IRA with-
- drawal to your investment accounts.
- #D5
-
-
- ~C~IThe foregoing is far from a complete description of the calculations
- and logical decision making within THE FINANCIAL PLANNER, but it is
- indicative of the kind of things that are taken into account in making
- the financial projections.~N
- #WP
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- #EF
- #T15,4,WHAT THE FINANCIAL PLANNER REPORT CONTAINS
- #C3,R4
-
-
- THE FINANCIAL PLANNER provides two levels of reports:
-
- ~C~IBrief (On-screen)~N
-
- This very abbreviated summary reports your financial status at the end of
- the specified forecast period. It includes the ending balance, if any, in
- each category of investment.
- #D3
-
-
- In the event that your resources are exhausted prior to the end of the
- specified period, the report indicates how many years into the plan the
- funds finally run out.
- #D3
-
-
- ~C~IWhatever the indicated result, it is a simple matter to make additional
- program runs, adjusting early year savings and/or later year withdrawals,
- until you achieve a plan that you feel is as realistic as possible, given
- your present age, financial status, and best estimates of future rates-of-
- return, inflation, etcetera.~N
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C3,R4
- PROGRAM REPORTS
-
- ~C~IDetailed (Printer Required)~N
-
- This long-form report details your forecasted financial status at year-end
- for each year in the forecast period. It includes the follwing information
- for each year:
- #D2
-
- ~C~I(a) Calendar Year
- #D1
- (b) Your (and your Spouse's) Ages
- #D1
- (c) IRA Accounts Balance
- #D1
- (d) IRA Accounts Earnings
- #D1
- (e) Investments Balance
- #D1
- (f) Investments Earnings
- #D1
- #C44,R13
- (g) Pension Income
- #D1
- (h) Social Security Income
- #D1
- (i) Investment Income
- #D1
- (j) Federal Income Taxes
- #D1
- (k) Net Spendable Income~N
- #D1
- #C3,R20
- Once you have created as realistic a plan as you think possible, it is in-
- valuable to save a long-form printout, together with the data & assumptions
- you put into the plan, to compare your actual plan year performance against
- the projection. This technique will provide you much information to make
- ever better plans in each succeeding year! Good Luck!
- #WP
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- %
- #EF
- #T15,4,HANDLING FEDERAL INCOME TAXES IN THE FINANCIAL PLANNER
- #C3,R12
- #HH,10,11,70,1,11,1
- ~C~IFederal Income Taxes are an important part of any
- financial plan. They can significantly affect your
- ability to accumulate assets. As such, they are
- an integral part of THE FINANCIAL PLANNER's con-
- siderations. Here's how they are handled.~N
- #HH,10,17,70,1,11,1
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C3,R5
- ~C~IFEDERAL INCOME TAXES - EXEMPTIONS & DEDUCTIONS~N
-
- Current Federal Income Tax allows specified personal exemptions and standard
- deductions, based on your age and your filing status. These exemptions and
- deductions are inflation-indexed--that is, adjusted with an inflation index
- so that their real value will not be diluted as inflation occurs.
-
- THE FINANCIAL PLANNER assumes a two-person household for Married Couples
- filing jointly and for those filing as Head of Household, includes the extra
- deductions for those beyond 65 years of age, uses the rates established for
- 1991, and adjusts the dollar amounts for subsequent years based upon the est-
- imated annual inflation rate you enter into the program.
-
- Amounts paid for mortgage interest and property taxes on up to two personal
- residences are deductible from taxable income as itemized deductions. Because
- these amounts are generally higher than the allowed standard deductions, the
- FINANCIAL PLANNER computes these amounts for each year in your plan, and, for
- each year in which they are higher than the standard deduction, it uses those
- amounts rather than the standard deduction in calculating that year's taxes.
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C3,R4
- ~C~IFEDERAL INCOME TAXES - IRA & 401(K) INVESTMENTS~N
-
- There are three major differences, from an income-tax point-of-view, between
- these and any other investments. THE FINANCIAL PLANNER automatically includes
- the effects of all three of these.
-
- ~C~IOne:~N
- All earnings and, within limits, the initial investments themselves, are free
- of income tax until they are withdrawn.
-
- ~C~ITwo:~N
- Any funds withdrawn from these accounts prior to your reaching 59-1/2 years of
- age, are subject to a Federal tax penalty of 10%, in addition to the regular
- taxes due on the total amount withdrawn.
-
- ~C~IThree:~N
- After you reach 70-1/2 years of age, you MUST withdraw a certain minimum part
- of your total IRA investments, regardless of your need for such amounts.
- The minimum withdrawal amount in any year is based upon your (or you and your
- spouse's joint) life expectancy, is different each year, and is governed by
- IRS published Tables.
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C3,R4
- ~C~IFEDERAL INCOME TAXES - INVESTMENT EARNINGS~N
-
- THE FINANCIAL PLANNER assumes all investments to fall into one of two classes
- for income tax purposes.
-
- ~C~ITax-Deferred Investments:~N
-
- These include IRA Accounts, 401(k) Plans, and SEP Accounts. Earnings are con-
- sidered to be tax-deferred until funds are withdrawn, and the total annual
- earnings are added to the start-of-year investment. Funds withdrawn are con-
- sdered fully taxable in the year in which withdrawn.
-
-
- ~C~IOrdinary Taxable Investments~N
-
- These include all other investment accounts, whatever their nature. Earnings
- are considered to be taxable in the year earned. Income taxes are calculated
- on the earnings in the year earned. If the sum of these earnings (after tax)
- and all other after-tax earnings in any year are greater than your projected
- earnings for that year, the remaining funds are added to the start-of-year
- balance for your total Taxable Investments.
- #WP
-
- %
- #EW
- #C3,R5
- ~C~IFEDERAL INCOME TAX - PROFITS FROM THE SALE OF A PERSONAL RESIDENCE~N
-
- Net profits from the sale of any asset are subject to Federal Income Tax at
- the same rate as any other income.
-
- However, the Federal tax laws make two exceptions for the profits from the
- sale of a personal residence.
-
- ~C~IOne:~N
- If you re-invest the profits in another primary residence within two years of
- the date of sale, and that residence costs at least as much as the residence
- sold, taxes are deferred.
-
- ~C~ITwo:~N
- If you are 55 years of age or more, do not purchase another primary residence
- within two years, and neither you nor your spouse has used the exemption be-
- fore, up to $125,000 of such profits are exempt from Federal Income Tax.
-
- THE FINANCIAL PLANNER contains a calculation module to determine taxable & non-
- taxable portions of such profits, and a facility to enter them accordingly.
- #WP
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- %
- #EW
- #C3,R5
- FEDERAL INCOME TAXES - SOCIAL SECURITY INCOME
-
- For the majority of Social Security recipients, Social Security payments are
- tax-free. However, there is an earned income limit.
-
-
- If your earned income exceeds a certain amount, and you are under age 70,some
- portion of your Social Security payments will be subject to Federal Income
- Tax. As your earned income increases above that amount, so too does the port-
- ion of your Social Security payments subject to Federal Income Tax, until, at
- some point, your entire Social Security payment becomes subject to tax.
-
-
- After you reach age 70, your Social Security payments are not subject to tax,
- regardless of the amount of your earned income.
-
-
- THE FINANCIAL PLANNER automatically considers these tax provisions, and will
- apply them, if appropriate, in each year of your plan.
- #WP
-
- #X