How IRAs work and what advantages they offer

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Historically, an IRA, or individual retirement account, is a retirement savings option that you access of your own accord — unlike, say, employer-sponsored options like 401(k) plans or pensions. But in recent years, in an effort to increase Americans’ retirement savings efforts, some states have begun to offer IRA enrollment through automatic individual retirement account programs (or auto-IRAs).

These programs “typically require private employers that don’t offer workplace retirement plans like 401(k)s to register for state-run plans,” and “workers are automatically enrolled in IRAs, often with 3 to 5% of their income deducted from their paychecks,” said The New York Times. As of November, such programs are available in 10 states; they will soon be available in seven more, the outlet added, according to the Georgetown University Center for Retirement Initiatives.

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