This was a question asked of San Francisco Chronicle financial columnist Kathleen Pender:
Q: Mark P., a retired doctor, asks, "For years, I have been getting a W-2 from (my former employer) for the value of my husband's medical insurance, about $12,000 to $13,000 a year. It's the only W-2 income I have. All the rest is unearned. Based on that W-2, I have been contributing about $5,000 a year to an IRA. If I file amended returns for several years, what do you suppose the IRS will do about all those IRA contributions I made which I probably shouldn't have been able to make?
Q: Mark P., a retired doctor, asks, "For years, I have been getting a W-2 from (my former employer) for the value of my husband's medical insurance, about $12,000 to $13,000 a year. It's the only W-2 income I have. All the rest is unearned. Based on that W-2, I have been contributing about $5,000 a year to an IRA. If I file amended returns for several years, what do you suppose the IRS will do about all those IRA contributions I made which I probably shouldn't have been able to make?
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