smellthejeta said:Presumaly, you will be in a higher tax bracket then you are now,
Smellthejeta, there are a couple of flaws in your analysis:
1. Most people have a lower income after they retire than they did when they working-- which means they're in a lower tax bracket after retirement, not a higher one. That's supposed to be one of the advantages of a regular IRA or 401k-- rather than pay taxes on your contributions at your present higher rate, you pay taxes on it after retirement, when you're in a lower bracket.
2. If you're in, say, the 28% tax bracket, that does not mean that your entire income is taxed at 28%. For a joint return, in rough numbers, the first $15,000 is taxed at 10%, the next $45,000 at 15%, the next $60,000 at 25%; only amounts over $120,000 (and less than $182,000) would be taxed at 28%. The net effect of this is that the percentage of your gross income that goes to federal taxes is substantially less than your tax bracket. A retirement income of $100,000 would place the taxpayer in the 25% tax bracket-- but their federal tax would be around $15,000, or 15% of their gross income.
3. Tax brackets only go to 35%, not 50%-- and you'd have to have a annual retirement income of over $325,000 to reach that bracket. If you're going to make your living in the aviation industry, it ain't likely you're going to be retiring on $300k+ per year. <g>