The Thrift Savings Plan offers you two ways to save for retirement. You may elect to defer your federal pay into a traditional account, before state and federal income taxes are deducted, or you may defer your pay, after taxes, into a Roth account. You may use one, the other or both options, and start or stop either or both types of contributions when you like.

Based on the questions I receive from Federal Times readers through the "Ask the Experts" forum, the "pay now and not later" approach offered by the Roth account is inherently appealing to many TSP participants. The reason is often the idea that paying tax on a smaller amount — usually assumed to be the contribution — is better than paying tax on a larger amount — usually assumed to be the withdrawal. The problem here is that this is not always the case. To illustrate this fact, consider some arithmetic:

Start with $10,000 and remove 25 percent, or $2,500 for tax payments. Invest the remaining $7,500 in a Roth account until it doubles to $15,000. Withdraw it from the Roth a few years from now, tax-free, and you'll have $15,000 to spend on that new iPhone with the built-in hair dryer. Instead, you could contribute the same $10,000 before taxes from your paycheck into a traditional TSP account, leave it there until it doubles in value to $20,000, withdraw it, pay 25 percent, or $5,000 in taxes, and be left with $15,000 to spend on that new iPhone.

In the Roth example, you only paid tax on $10,000, while in the traditional example you paid tax on twice that amount. Yet, in each case you were left with the same spendable income, all the way through. In part, it's the way the world works, and in part it's the analytic method I used. The key to the results was that I held the tax rates the same for both the contributions and the withdrawals, and that I based the analysis on comparable gross, or pretax, investment amounts. Both of these assumptions are reasonable possibilities — maybe even likely — but not the only possibilities. If the tax rates differ on either end of the analysis, or if I assume that the TSP's contribution limits are reached in each case, the results will be different.

The analysis always requires that the analyst make predictions about the future, and these predictions, while unreliable, will heavily influence the analytic results, and the conclusions drawn from those results. In addition to the influence of an analyst's assumptions, your individual circumstances will determine the type of analysis that best suits the decision and the results that will be produced by that analysis.

In addition to the results of scenario and mathematical analysis, there are other factors to consider when deciding between traditional and Roth TSP contributions. Once you make a Roth contribution, both types of money in your account must be invested and managed the same way. Each withdrawal you make will come, proportionately, from each type of money. When you reach the point when you must begin withdrawing your money, your Roth balance will be used in determining the size of the required withdrawal each year — something that does not happen in a Roth IRA or a regular, taxable investment account. These are complicating factors that should be carefully understood, considered and weighed against any benefit that is expected to accrue before you decide to make Roth TSP contributions.

Finally, when considering whether or not to contribute to the Roth TSP, you should benchmark that option against the alternatives of contributing to a Roth IRA, if you are eligible, or to a regular, taxable investment account. It may be possible, using one or both of these alternatives, to obtain similar results using a less complicated solution.

Mike Miles is a Certified Financial Planner licensee and principal adviser for Variplan LLC, an independent fiduciary in Vienna, Virginia. Email your questions to fedexperts@federaltimes.com and view his blog at money.federaltimes.com.

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