0 used to describe a situation in which you pay tax for something at a later date than usual:
With this plan, your contributions are tax-deferred, so that your savings grow faster than they would if some of the earnings went to pay taxes.
The money can accumulate on a tax-deferred basis for years until needed.
a tax-deferred account/arrangement/plan
a tax-deferred investment/contribution
Further, those with both taxable and tax-deferred accounts may have low balances in their taxable accounts.
This dummy variable indicates if the individuals have tax-deferred pension savings in third-pillar private pension schemes.
About 35 % of the individuals who were entitled to participate in the new pension system had tax-deferred pension savings and clearly these individuals have experience of financial markets.
We have also indicated that it is an inappropriate instrument to either compensate for any distributional issues linked to tax-deferred savings plans, or to address foreign control.
In 2007, the money was placed into their tax-deferred retirement accounts, not given in cash.
Cash value growth in permanent plans is tax-deferred as long as the policy is in force.
Many investors will hold onto tax-deferred certificates for the full length of time and the interest earned can be quite substantial.
In theory, such tax-deferred compounding allows more money to be put to work while the savings are accumulating, leading to higher returns.