Retirement accounts in Bankruptcy
When people get in a financial bind, bankruptcy is generally the last option, as can be expected. Consequently, this means that most people will exhaust all of their assets before even considering it. In the meantime, they’re hoping that circumstances will change, and they’ll be able to get out of the situation on their own. This is very common when an individual loses his or her job, and is optimistic that another is just around the corner. However, in today’s market, long gaps in between employment is common. Many people don’t have enough in savings to deal with these long periods of unemployment, even if they receive unemployment compensation. Accordingly, they move forward with draining their bank accounts to make payments to past creditors, get further behind on their monthly bills, and then, as a last resort, dive into their retirement savings. If they still haven’t bettered their circumstances once their retirement money is gone, then suddenly they find themselves in a position where it is impossible to pay their bills. It is only at this time that some begin to think about bankruptcy.
The unfortunate reality is that for individuals who follow this route, they most likely would have been better off if they had considered bankruptcy before withdrawing from their retirement accounts. That is because most retirement accounts in Indiana such as 401(k) and PERF accounts are usually completely exempt in bankruptcy. When something is exempt in bankruptcy, that means that it cannot be taken by creditors. In other words, a bankruptcy would allow the debt to be eliminated, but people would still have their exempt retirement accounts after the bankruptcy is over. Thus, had the individuals filed bankruptcy prior to draining their retirement accounts instead of afterward, then the same debt would have been discharged; the only difference is that they would have still been able to hold onto their retirement account.
Individuals needlessly exhausting their 401(k), PERF, and other protected retirement accounts is something I commonly see. Indiana exemption laws protect them with good reason. Congress nowadays frequently talks about our country’s huge debt needing to be paid by future generations. The Indiana exemption law for retirement accounts recognizes that draining retirement accounts now would only create a bigger problem down the road; it is one of the few instances where law is structured to help with this problem. In my opinion, there is no benefit to society in draining retirement accounts now to pay what is most likely private creditors who’ve made bad business choices in extending credit to certain individuals, only for those individuals to have no means of paying essential needs upon actual retirement, which would then be expected or needed to be covered by a pool of public funds. My rule of thumb: if there’s a tax penalty for withdrawing the funds, forget about them and pretend like they don’t exist until you actually retire. In the meantime, individuals need to be responsible and realistic about their financial condition, and consider talking to a bankruptcy attorney a bit earlier, at least to realize what the bankruptcy option really means to them.