Financial advisors who work with clients focused on saving for retirement are well aware of the uses of both traditional individual retirement accounts, which see taxes assessed upon distribution, and Roth IRAs, which are used for dollars that have already been taxed for income purposes.
In practice, individuals are often advised to contribute to a Roth account if their tax rate is expected to increase in the future, because such an account will have higher after-tax accumulation than a traditional account contribution. The opposite is advised when the tax rate is expected to decrease.
However, according to a detailed new analysis published in the Journal of Financial Planning, "Roth Versus Traditional Account Contributions and Tax Rate Uncertainty," advisors do not always appreciate the complexity of the Roth versus traditional account decision.
According to the paper, written by David Hulse, professor emeritus in the Von Allmen School of Accountancy and the Martin School of Public Policy and Administration at the University of Kentucky, in any given planning scenario, the type of account with the higher expected after-tax accumulation generally also has higher uncertainty with respect to the targeted outcome.
In other words, there is generally a trade-off to be made between pursuing higher overall retirement wealth and having a higher degree of conviction that one is going to achieve their desired outcome.
According to Hulse, if an individual chooses the account type with the higher expected accumulation, they generally must accept higher uncertainty. On the other hand, if that individual chooses the account type with lower uncertainty, they generally must accept a lower expected accumulation amount.
The importance of these two considerations varies among clients, Hulse says, and a financial planner can use the new paper's results to help them decide how to best manage such trade-offs.
Setting Up the Analysis
As Hulse spells out, the after-tax accumulation of a Roth or traditional contribution is uncertain because future investment returns are uncertain. The future tax rate is also uncertain, which affects a traditional account's accumulation.
"One thus might think that a contribution's after-tax accumulation is more uncertain for a traditional account than for a Roth account, a purported advantage of a Roth account," Hulse writes.
However, Hulse says his results show that the after-tax accumulation, or ATA, can actually be lower or higher for a Roth account. It all depends on the assumptions one makes about investment returns and tax rate changes.
Hulse says the analysis also shows that this uncertainty is generally higher for the type of account with the higher expected after-tax accumulation. Which type of account this will be depends, in turn, on whether the tax rate is expected to increase or decrease.
Ultimately, for financial planning professionals, these dynamics mean there is a trade-off between a higher expected ATA and lower ATA uncertainty. As Hulse explains, choosing the account type to meet one of these considerations generally means the other consideration will not be met.
Running the Analysis
After spelling out this framework, Hulse's paper models ATA uncertainty using a sophisticated regression analysis. As noted, the results show that the actual uncertainty can be lower or higher for a Roth account than for a traditional account. The models also show that there generally is a trade-off between a higher expected ATA (i.e., the mean of its statistical distribution) and lower ATA uncertainty.