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Liz Pulliam Weston

The Basics

Money math you need to know

Continued from page 1

Still, using gross pay ignores the fact that we pay taxes on our incomes. Because of taxes, we have to earn more than a dollar -- typically, substantially more -- to clear each dollar we use to buy something.

For these calculations, we'll use marginal tax rates -- essentially, how much in taxes you'd pay on each additional dollar you earn. Your effective tax rate, or the percentage of your total income you pay in taxes, is typically much less thanks to exemptions and deductions that protect some of your income from taxation.

If you're single and your taxable income is $40,000, for example, your federal marginal tax would be 25%, meaning the feds get a quarter of every additional dollar you earn over $32,550 (which is where the 25% tax bracket is expected to start in 2008, according to CCH tax research business). If you checked your last tax return, though, you'd probably find the total dollar amount you paid in taxes might be 15% to 20% of your total income.

For single people:
When taxable income is:The tax is:Plus:Of the amount over:

$0 to $8,025

$0

10%

$0

$8,026 to $32,550

$803

15%

$8,025

$32,551 to $78,850

$4,481

25%

$32,550

$78,851 to $164,550

$16,056

28%

$78,850

$164,551 to $357,700

$40,052

33%

$164,550

More than $357,700

$103,792

35%

$357,700

For married couples:
When taxable income is:The tax is:Plus:Of the amount over:
$0 to $16,050

$0

10%

$0

$16,051 to $65,150

$1,605

15%

$16,050

$65,151 to $131,450

$8,963

25%

$65,100

$131,451 to $200,300

$25,550

28%

$131,450

$200,301 to $357,700

$44,828

33%

$200,300

More than $357,700

$96,770

35%

$357,700

Source: CCH, a Wolters Kluwer business

Income taxes aren't all you pay. You also must pay Social Security and Medicare taxes on wages and salaries. For most folks, that's an additional 7.62% that has to be included in your calculations.

And unless you live in one of the nine states that lack an income tax -- Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington or Wyoming -- you also pay a state income tax that typically ranges from 2% to 10%. (New Hampshire and Tennessee do tax dividend and interest income.) You can find the 2007 brackets at Bankrate.com.

A Californian with $40,000 in taxable income might pay a 25% federal marginal tax rate, 8% in state taxes and 7.62% in Social Security and Medicare taxes, for a total tax bill of about 41%. If she itemizes her deductions, she gets a bit of a break since state taxes are deductible on federal returns; subtract 2 percentage points from the total to adjust for that (0.25 times 0.08 is 0.02, or 2%), leaving 39%.

Now for the rest of the calculations. We subtract the combined tax rate from 1, then divide $1 by the result.

So 1 minus 0.39 is 0.61. Divide 1 by 0.61, and you get 1.639. To wind up with $1, then, our Californian has to make $1.64. If something costs $50, she needs to earn $82 to clear enough to pay for it.

California's a high-tax state. The burden's lighter elsewhere. As a rule of thumb, though, you should figure that you need to earn around $1.50 to clear each dollar you use to spend.

Figure the tax advantage

Don't walk away depressed, because the tax code can also work in your favor.

If you have a mortgage or student loans, for example, your interest may be tax-deductible. That means the real rate you're paying is lower, sometimes substantially lower, than the interest rate printed on your statements.

Let's say you have a 6% interest rate on your mortgage and that you itemize your deductions (if you don't itemize, you get no tax benefits from a mortgage). Let's further assume your combined federal and state tax bracket is 30%, which is the national average, according to the Tax Foundation.

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Subtract your combined tax rates from 1. You multiply the result by your nominal interest rate to get the real interest rate you're paying. So if your combined federal and state tax rate is 30%, you subtract 0.3 from 1 to get 0.7, and multiply that by your mortgage interest rate of 6% to get 4.2%. That's pretty cheap money by any measure.

Calculating 'Take this job . . .' money

How much money would you have to save, inherit or win to say goodbye to work?

You'll find plenty of retirement planners around the Web, including MSN Money's Retirement Planner, which I find particularly easy to use. Personal-finance software like Money and Quicken includes more sophisticated calculators that are also worth a look.

But if you want to ballpark a figure for what you'd need to save to stop work tomorrow, simply multiply your living expenses by 25.

Why 25? Because financial planners generally agree that 4% is a "sustainable" withdrawal rate from a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds and cash. That means you can take out 4% of the total in the first year, adjust the withdrawal every year afterward by the inflation rate, and face relatively little risk of running out of money.

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So to get the lump sum you'd need, you divide your annual living expenses by 0.04 -- which is the same as multiplying the same expenses by 25. If you need $30,000 to live on, you'd need $750,000. If you want to be more conservative and reduce the chances of running dry to virtually zero, multiply by 33 instead. That approximates an initial withdrawal rate of slightly more than 3%.

Columns by Liz Pulliam Weston, the Web's most-read personal finance writer and winner of the 2007 Clarion Award for online journalism, appear every Monday and Thursday, exclusively on MSN Money. She also answers reader questions on the Your Money message board.

Published Nov. 12, 2007

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