The article makes a good point for lower income workers. People who are making higher incomes still benefit tremendously from pre-tax 401k investing.
No, a family of four with lower income is likely eligible for EITC, and contributions to a traditional 401k can increase the EITC amount considerably. The phaseout rate is 21% for 2 children, and my state matches EITC at 30%, an additional 6.3% phaseout rate, for a minimum marginal rate of 27.3% (before any tax reduction at all). Contributions to a tIRA are not equivalent for EITC, because they reduce only AGI, not w2 wages (as 401k contributions do), and EITC is tested on both. Lower income families with children should contribute to 401k, and then use the refundable credits from EITC & CTC to fund Roth IRAs for greater retirement savings.
Great point. I was thinking of folks in the middle or slighly above who are making maybe 50-100k. For them, the article is more valid. But you raise a really great point about folks who are EITC eligible due to their lower incomes. For them, it makes sense as long as they have their basic necessities covered with remaining take home pay.
Contributing to traditional 401k or SIMPLE IRA and HSA gets us down from $75k combined to well into EITC refund territory. We can make ourselves *look* lower income for both taxes and FAFSA for financial aid.
That EITC has a 21% phaseout rate. Our state matches EITC at 30%, essentially another 6.3% phaseout rate. Add on our state and federal tax brackets, and the marginal rate on 401k, etc, contributions is easily 45+% in the 12% bracket where most would say to go all Roth. Those refundable credits are valuable, and often ride along with related nonrefundable credits (have kids to be eligible for larger EITC, also have CTC under 17 with $600 nonrefundable or CTC over 17 with $500 nonrefundable; AOTC, 60% nonrefundable; Retirement Saver's credit up to $2k, due to reduced AGI). We waste thousands in nonrefundable credits we can't use, annually. Drives me crazy - if I tried to use them for Roth conversions, they either dry up (RSC as AGI increases, same for EITC) or hurt in other ways (FAFSA increased EFC cuts financial aid).
It's definitely more beneficial for us to get refundable credits as large as possible, and use those for more retirement savings (Roth IRAs - no further tax advantage to be gleaned). We won't begin serious Roth conversions until EITC eligibility goes away with dependents, the cost is too great.