Gordon Gekko
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Curious Marc. How could either make a contribution of €100k to a pension fund, based on a 30% limit? This may be of great relevance to me!Hi,
In fact, there’s a reasonable argument to be made for each of you making a contribution of €100k right away from your savings.
Much obliged. I get it now. One more thing, could you clarify the comment above? I am interested in the 'future earned income' piece..... plus you still pick up all the income tax relief against future earned income which has the effect of increasing your take home pay.
I see three risksThe percentage of net relevant earnings only relates to the amount of tax relief allowed in any one year. Any excess over that is carried forward and allowed indefinitely against future income.
The key advantage being that the whole capital sum is sheltered from personal taxes immediately ( no Dirt, income tax or capital gains tax) on future investment profits.
Assuming a 5%pa return that adds about 2%pa to your investment returns on all your capital compared to say an insurance company investment plus you still pick up all the income tax relief against future earned income which has the effect of increasing your take home pay.
With tax breaks so limited it never ceases to amaze me why more people don’t consider this.
Believe it or not, there are people on this site who have modest incomes.
450K is a huge amount to try and squirrel away, for most Irish people
I challenge anyone to argue that €85 a week from age 35 is a big ask in the context of funding one’s retirement.
With respect, it’s not a huge amount to try to squirrel away by any stretch of the imagination.
€370 invested in a pension each month starting at age 35 and retiring at age 65 with a growth rate of 4.5% per year would create a fund of €450,000.
I challenge anyone to argue that €85 a week from age 35 is a big ask in the context of funding one’s retirement.
True but the monthly contribution in Gordon's example (€370) is similarly unadjusted for inflation.Also, very misleading - we are talking about €450,000 in today's money terms - pretty massive difference in the sums!
Gordon's example of €370pm works out at less than 10% of €46k.It looks like the average wage for a full time worker in Ireland was running at circa €46k gross, about 18 months ago (that's not to be confused with the average industrial wage, which would be lower).
4.5% real return on equities over a 30-year period wouldn't be unusual by historical standards.
Your calculation looks right to me.Gordon,
on your calculations, I put it into a calculator: calculatorsoup future-value-calculator.php - google it as I can't post links
and get 280K after 30 years - not 450K - inputting 0 starting value 30 periods(years), 4.5 growth, 370 Payment amount, 0 payment growth and 12 payments per period.
am I doing something wrong?
Gordon,
on your calculations, I put it into a calculator: calculatorsoup future-value-calculator.php - google it as I can't post links
and get 280K after 30 years - not 450K - inputting 0 starting value 30 periods(years), 4.5 growth, 370 Payment amount, 0 payment growth and 12 payments per period.
am I doing something wrong?
Gordon's example of €370pm works out at less than 10% of €46k.
Surely an average earner should be putting away at least 15% of their gross income to save for their retirement. Bear in mind that contributions at that level would all be relieved of income tax at the higher rate.
What's the alternative? Rely on State hand-outs? Live on cat food?
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