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1. Determine the annuity starting date, which is:
One year before the first payment, if payments are made annually.
Six months before the first payment, if payments are made semi-annually.
Three months before the first payment, if payments are made quarterly.
One month before the first payment, if payments are made monthly.
2. Determine the number of whole and fractional years from the date of the contribution to the annuity starting date (the deferral period). Express the fractional year as a decimal of four numbers.
3. If the deferral period is 20 years or less, use the following formula to determine the compound interest factor:
F = 1.0575d, where
F is the compound interest factor and
d is the deferral period
Example: If the period between the contribution date and the annuity starting date is 11.5760 years, the compound interest factor would be 1.057511.5760 = 1.9102
4. Multiply the compound interest factor (F) by the immediate gift annuity rate for the nearest age or ages of a person or persons at the annuity starting date.
Example: If the sole annuitant will be nearest age 65 on the annuity starting date and the compound interest factor is 1.9102, the deferred gift annuity rate would be 1.9102 x 6.7% = 12.8% (rounded to the nearest tenth of a percent).
5. For deferral periods of more than 20 years, the procedure for calculating the compound interest factor is somewhat more complex. That is because the compound interest rate decreases for periods longer than 20 years. The compound interest rates are:
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1 - 20 years
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-
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5.75%
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20+ - 25 years
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-
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5.50%
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25+ - 30 years
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-
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5.25%
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30+ years
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-
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5.0%
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| Example: If the deferral period is 28.7050 years, follow this procedure: |
| 1.057520 |
=
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3.0592 |
| 1.05505 x 3.0592 |
=
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3.9984 |
| 1.05253.7050 x 3.9984 |
=
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4.8329 |
Each calculation is rounded to a decimal of four numbers.
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Comments:
- The annuity starting date for purposes of calculating the deferred gift annuity rate will be the same as the annuity starting date for calculating the charitable deduction, if payments are at the end of the period (which is usually the case). This was not true with the pre-July 1, 2001 methodology.
- An annuitant is credited with compound interest for the entire period from the date of contribution to the annuity starting date. Under the previous methodology, compound interest was credited only for the number of whole years between the two dates.
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