only if your plan allows in-service withdrawals....ask your HR or payroll dept.
I assume that you are asking about IRA withdrawals since the 70 1/2 matches that timeline. As for your question, the RMD (or required minimum distribution) is the legally required withdrawal amount from your traditional IRA. This RMD is required starting at 70 1/2, doesn't matter if you are still working or haven't worked for 30 years this is the required starting age for the minimum withdrawal amount. There is, however, a waiver of the RMD in place for 2009.
no
Nope. Unemployment is for when you are not working, If you are driving and getting paid, you are working.
401k loans are required to be repaid unless the plan (that you took the loan from) has a provision about stopping them in the event of bankrupcy. Usually this only applies if tyou are still working for that plan sponsor. If you are no longer working for the plan sponsor, you are either having payments deducted from your checking/savings account or are sending coupons- ususally. Simply stop making the payments, and the loan will default. Default is simply a status change from "loan" to 'withdrawal". You will receive an IRS 1099 form at the end of the year so you can pay the income taxes owed and a probable 10% early withdrawal penalty tax (ask a tax preparer if you would be exempt, probably not). The loan "disappears", you have changed it to a withdrawal. It does not get reported to credit agencies, only to the IRS as regular income.
Typically yes, failure to make the payment required as specified in the mortgage note is usually written in as a default.
No hasn't been working since 2009
Certainly. It uses the same symbol as the full integral, but you still treat the other independent variables as constants.
I assume that you are asking about IRA withdrawals since the 70 1/2 matches that timeline. As for your question, the RMD (or required minimum distribution) is the legally required withdrawal amount from your traditional IRA. This RMD is required starting at 70 1/2, doesn't matter if you are still working or haven't worked for 30 years this is the required starting age for the minimum withdrawal amount. There is, however, a waiver of the RMD in place for 2009.
Yes.
Yes.
They still do, there are many cowboys still working in many countries.
Years, I've had withdrawals for over 2 years. Addendum I still get them, its been 10 years since i last took one.
It's still called unemployment. You can get partial payment if you are working less. You apply the same way you would if you'd been laid off.
Yes.
no
Nope. You can still get pregnant. It is less likely, but can happen.
Yes you will if you still have your ovaries.