By Claudette Roulo
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – A major retirement savings tool available to
all service members and DOD civilians is the Thrift Savings Plan, and soon
there will be a new way to save for retirement -- the Roth TSP, a senior
Defense Department official said.
The Roth TSP, which uses after-tax
dollars, will begin phased implementation this month for the Marine Corps, and
in July for DOD civilians, said Barbara Thompson, the director of the Defense
Department’s Office of Family Policy/Children and Youth.
The Roth TSP plan will be available for
Navy, Air Force and Army members in October of this year, Thompson said.
The phased implementation will ensure
each customer’s taxable wages and TSP contributions are computed accurately,
according to Defense Finance and Accounting Service officials. The schedule
allows for thorough testing of the needed complex changes made to the various
civilian, active duty military and reserve component payroll systems, DFAS
officials said.
The TSP website “has a wealth of
information to help guide you on the differences between the [TSP] plans,”
Thompson said.
Financial readiness, including choosing
the right investments and savings plans, is crucial to service members’
financial futures, Thompson said. Service members should start saving for
retirement early, she said, because they never know what path their careers
might take.
“If you don’t put something away in that
retirement plan, you may not have something if you don’t reach your 20 years as
a military member,” Thompson said.
And, because of compound interest, she
added, service members who wait to save until late in their careers can lose
hundreds of thousands of dollars.
However, financial readiness “also
includes debt management, managing your credit card[s] and basically
[practicing] impulse control on your buying to make sure that you don’t live
outside your means,” Thompson said.
Free financial consulting services are
available through installation family assistance centers and Military
OneSource, Thompson said. Military OneSource provides advice and assistance for
service member family issues such as deployments, parenting, financial
management, education, child care, military spouse employment, and more.
Military financial consulting services
also can assist military members in making the right financial management
decisions for their particular circumstances, she said.
Financial management tools offered
through Military OneSource aren’t just for active duty service members,
Thompson said, noting reserve component members “who are geographically
isolated or those who may want to do it from the convenience of their home … can
call Military OneSource and get that service.”
In any event, financial decisions should
not be made in isolation, Thompson said.
“It’s important to get expert advice,”
she said, “and our personal financial counselors -- both on the military
installations and through Military OneSource -- are certified financial
counselors.”
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