I don't understand the requirement of IRS-approved. What do they
have to do with it? So far as I know, the IRS has no authority
to approve mortality tables.
The standard is the Commission's Ordinary Standard. However,
insurance companies often use their own proprietary tables. Still,
I would think that the Commission's Ordinary Standard should
fulfill a lot of purposes.
A few years ago I posted in this newsgroup an insurance mortality
table broken out by sex and smokers vs non-smokers. Perhaps you
can still find it by searching dejanews.
--
Once you have said that in correlative conjunctions in the subjunctive
mood there should be parity between the protasis and the apodosis, you
have said about all there is to say on the matter. But you have also, I
think, left most of us as confused as before.
=============from Bill Bryson's, _Troublesome Words_==============
>Can anyone point to a place where one can find IRS-approved
>life-expectancy tables?
>Thanks.
-----------
Darrell
The IRS publishes it's own table of "divisors" for
purposes of withdrawal etc. These are not life expectancies
but can be used for IRA withdrawals. Pub 590 Individual
Retirement Arrangements (IRAs). Would need to check if
applicable to 401K etc.
B. Burkart
B.B. Opinions on Some Govt Programs etc.
(Retirement oriented such as Social Security etc).
NEW: Special on MEDICARE Means Test
With Senate who Voted Against/For List
yes. in the Pensions and Annuities publication from the IRS.
call them.
--
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Ah, the great light dawns. That's what he means.