| 释义 | 
		Definition of Roth IRA in US English: Roth IRAnounrôTHräTH An individual retirement account allowing a person to set aside after-tax income up to a specified amount each year. Both earnings on the account and withdrawals after age 59½ are tax-free.  Example sentencesExamples -  If you have a traditional individual retirement account, consider converting to a Roth IRA, where withdrawals are tax-free after you retire.
 -  There are lots of good reasons to roll over a traditional individual retirement account to a Roth IRA.
 -  Do you yourself have retirement accounts set up for yourself such as a Roth IRA?
 -  The earnings distributed from the Traditional IRA, however, will be treated as taxable income, whereas qualified distributions of earnings from a Roth IRA are tax free.
 -  Republicans would like to see income limits removed for IRAs, 401 s, and especially Roth IRAs, whose withdrawals are tax-free.
 
 
 Origin   Created in 1997 and named for Senator William Victor Roth II (1921–2003) of Delaware, who proposed this in Congress.    Definition of Roth IRA in US English: Roth IRAnounräTH An individual retirement account allowing a person to set aside after-tax income up to a specified amount each year. Both earnings on the account and withdrawals after age 59½ are tax-free.  Example sentencesExamples -  If you have a traditional individual retirement account, consider converting to a Roth IRA, where withdrawals are tax-free after you retire.
 -  Do you yourself have retirement accounts set up for yourself such as a Roth IRA?
 -  There are lots of good reasons to roll over a traditional individual retirement account to a Roth IRA.
 -  Republicans would like to see income limits removed for IRAs, 401 s, and especially Roth IRAs, whose withdrawals are tax-free.
 -  The earnings distributed from the Traditional IRA, however, will be treated as taxable income, whereas qualified distributions of earnings from a Roth IRA are tax free.
 
 
 Origin   Created in 1997 and named for Senator William Victor Roth II (1921–2003) of Delaware, who proposed this in Congress.     |