MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO 2
485BPOS, 1996-04-30
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<PAGE>
 
     
  AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON APRIL 30, 1996     
 
                                                       REGISTRATION NO. 33-5609
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
       
                                   FORM N-4
 
          REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933[X]
 
                        PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO.[_]
                                              ----
                       
                    POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 17[X]     
 
                                    AND/OR
      REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940[X]
                                
                             AMENDMENT NO. 19     
        
                               ---------------
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                          (EXACT NAME OF REGISTRANT)
 
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                              (NAME OF DEPOSITOR)
                           
                               320 PARK AVENUE 
                        NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10022     
       
    (ADDRESS OF DEPOSITOR'S PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICE INCLUDING ZIP CODE)
    DEPOSITOR'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE: (212) 224-1600     
      
                           PATRICK A. BURNS, ESQ. 
                  MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 
                               320 PARK AVENUE 
                        NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10022     
                    (NAME AND ADDRESS OF AGENT FOR SERVICE)
 
                                   COPY TO:
     
                          ROBERT S. SCHNEIDER, ESQ. 
                             GRAHAM & JAMES LLP 
                              885 THIRD AVENUE 
                        NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10022     
 
  APPROXIMATE DATE OF PROPOSED PUBLIC OFFERING: As soon as practicable after
the effective date of the Registration Statement.
 
                               ---------------
 
  IT IS PROPOSED THAT THIS FILING WILL BECOME EFFECTIVE (CHECK APPROPRIATE
SPACE)
                       immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b) of
                   ---
                   Rule 485
                      
                    X on May 1, 1996 pursuant to paragraph (b) of Rule 485
                   ---
                       
                       60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule
                   ---
                   485
                       on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a) of Rule 485
   
  THE REGISTRANT HAS REGISTERED AN INDEFINITE NUMBER OF SHARES UNDER THE
SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 PURSUANT TO RULE 24f-2 UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT
OF 1940. THE NOTICE REQUIRED BY SUCH RULE FOR THE REGISTRANT'S MOST RECENT
FISCAL YEAR WAS FILED ON FEBRUARY 29, 1996.     
 
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
 
PROSPECTUS
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                    Variable Accumulation Annuity Contracts
                                   Issued By
                   Mutual of America Life Insurance Company
                                
                             320 Park Avenue     
                            
                         New York, New York 10022     
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
The group variable accumulation annuity contracts ("Contracts") offered by
Mutual of America Life Insurance Company (the "Insurance Company") and
described in this Prospectus are designed to aid employees of states,
agencies, instrumentalities or political subdivisions thereof, in retirement
and long-term financial planning by providing monthly Benefit Payments which
begin at a selected future date under an eligible deferred compensation plan
and contract as provided by Section 457 of the Internal Revenue Code ("Code").
       
Participating employees under Contracts are referred to in this Prospectus as
"Participants."     
   
The Contracts permit Deferred Compensation deposits to be made by the
Contractholder, generally, in whatever amounts and at whatever frequency is
desired by a Participant under the Plan, subject to the limitations of Section
457. Deferred Compensation deposits may be accumulated on behalf of a
Participant on a completely variable basis, a completely fixed basis, or a
combination variable and fixed basis. The basic purpose of the variable
accumulation aspect of the Contracts is to provide Participants with an
opportunity to accumulate amounts toward retirement, or for other financial
purposes, that will reflect the investment experience of one or more of the
distinct funds comprising Mutual of America Separate Account No. 2 ("Separate
Account") to which Contributions may be allocated. Deferred Compensation
deposits under the Contracts may be allocated in whole or in part to any of
the Funds of the Separate Account or to the General Account of the Insurance
Company (the "Investment Alternatives").     
   
The assets in each Fund of the Separate Account are invested in shares of:
    
- -- one or more of the following eight Funds of Mutual of America Investment
  Corporation (the "Investment Company"): Money Market Fund, All America Fund,
  Equity Index Fund, Bond Fund, Short-Term Bond Fund, Mid-Term Bond Fund,
  Composite Fund and Aggressive Equity Fund;
- -- one or more of the following three Fidelity Investments (R) portfolios:
  Equity-Income Portfolio of the Variable Insurance Products Fund and
  Contrafund and Asset Manager Portfolios of the Variable Insurance Products
  Fund II (collectively, the "Fidelity Portfolios");
   
- -- one or more of the following three portfolios of Scudder Variable Life
  Investment Fund: Scudder Capital Growth Portfolio, Scudder Bond Portfolio,
  and Scudder International Portfolio (collectively, the "Scudder
  Portfolios"), in each case the Class A shares;     
- -- the TCI Growth Fund of TCI Portfolios, Inc.; and
- -- the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio of Acacia Capital
  Corporation.
 
The respective Prospectuses for the Investment Company, the Fidelity
Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios, the TCI Growth Fund and the Calvert
Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio, which are attached to this
Prospectus, describe the investment objectives and policies of each of the
variable accumulation Investment Alternatives, as well as the risks relating
to investments in each such Investment Alternative.
   
The value of a Participant's interest in the Separate Account will depend upon
the investment performance of the chosen Investment Alternative. THE INSURANCE
COMPANY DOES NOT GUARANTEE THE INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE OF ANY FUND OF THE
SEPARATE ACCOUNT. Accordingly, the Participant bears the entire investment
risk for any amounts allocated to the Separate Account.     
   
Amounts accumulated under the Contracts may be applied to provide monthly
Benefit Payments on a fixed basis commencing at a future date selected by the
Participant.     
   
This Prospectus generally describes only the variable portion of the
Contracts. For a brief summary of the fixed portion, see "The General
Account."     
   
This Prospectus sets forth the information that a prospective investor should
know before investing. A Statement of Additional Information about the
Contracts and the Separate Account is available free by writing the Insurance
Company at the address above or by calling (212) 224-1600. The Statement of
Additional Information, which has the same date as the Prospectus, has been
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and is incorporated herein
by reference. The table of contents of the Statement of Additional Information
is included at the end of this Prospectus.     
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  THESE SECURITIES HAVE  NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED  BY THE SECURITIES
    AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION  NOR  HAS THE  COMMISSION  PASSED  UPON  THE
       ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY  OF THIS PROSPECTUS.  ANY REPRESENTATION TO
                     THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please read this Prospectus carefully for details on the Contracts being
offered and retain it for future reference. It is not valid unless attached to
the current prospectus for the Investment Company, Fidelity Portfolios,
Scudder Variable Life Investment Fund, TCI Growth Fund and the Calvert
Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio.
   
Dated: May 1, 1996     
<PAGE>
 
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
                                        PAGE
                                        ----
<S>                                     <C>
Table of Annual Expenses...............   4
Unit Value Information.................   6
Definitions............................   8
Summary................................  10
Mutual of America Life Insurance
 Company...............................  13
The Separate Account...................  14
Investments of the Separate Account....  14
Charges................................  18
 Administrative Charges................  18
 Distribution Expense Charge...........  18
 Mortality and Expense Risk Charge.....  19
 Portfolio Company Expenses............  19
The Group Contract.....................  21
 General...............................  21
 Deposits of Deferred Compensation.....  21
 Allocations of Deferred Compensation
  Deposits.............................  22
 Accumulation Units....................  22
 Transfers Among Investment
  Alternatives.........................  23
 Withdrawals...........................  24
 Death Benefits........................  24
 Benefit Payments......................  24
</TABLE>    
<TABLE>                             
<CAPTION>
                                         PAGE
                                         ----
<S>                                      <C>
Discontinuance.........................   25
Postponement of Payments...............   25
Period After Annuity Commencement Date.   26
 General...............................   26
 Annuity Commencement Date.............   26
 Available Forms of Periodic Benefits..   27
 Amount of Periodic Benefit Payments...   28
 Small Benefit Payments................   28
The General Account....................   29
General Matters........................   30
Federal Tax Matters....................   33
Voting Rights..........................   34
Performance Information................   34
Funding and Other Changes..............   35
Other Variable Annuity Contracts.......   35
Table of Contents of the Statement of
 Additional Information................   36
Obtaining a Copy of the Statement of
 Additional Information................   36
Order Form For Statement of Additional
 Information...........................   36
</TABLE>    
   
THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFERING IN ANY JURISDICTION IN WHICH
SUCH OFFERING MAY NOT LAWFULLY BE MADE. NO DEALER, SALESMAN OR OTHER PERSON IS
AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY INFORMATION OR TO MAKE ANY REPRESENTATIONS IN
CONNECTION WITH THIS OFFERING OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROSPECTUS,
AND, IF GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH OTHER INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS MUST NOT BE
RELIED UPON.     
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
 
                           TABLE OF ANNUAL EXPENSES
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
                                          Investment
                                           Company
                                         All America,
                                            Bond,
                             Investment   Short-Term   Investment Investment Fidelity             Fidelity   Scudder
                              Company       Bond,       Company    Company     VIP     Fidelity    VIP II    Capital Scudder
                               Money    Mid-Term Bond,   Equity   Aggressive Equity-    VIP II     Asset     Growth   Bond
                               Market   and Composite    Index      Equity    Income  Contrafund  Manager    Class A Class A
                             ---------- -------------- ---------- ---------- -------- ----------  --------   ------- -------
<S>                          <C>        <C>            <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>         <C>        <C>     <C>
Contractowner
 Transaction
 Expenses
 Sales Load
  Imposed on
  Purchases......               None         None         None       None      None      None       None      None    None
 Deferred Sales
    Load.........               None         None         None       None      None      None       None      None    None
 Surrender Fees..               None         None         None       None      None      None       None      None    None
 Exchange Fee....               None         None         None       None      None      None       None      None    None
Annual Contract
 Fee(1)..........                $24          $24          $24        $24       $24         4        $24       $24     $24
                                ====         ====         ====       ====      ====      ====       ====      ====    ====
Separate Account
 Annual Expenses
 (as a percentage
  of average
  account value)
 Mortality and
  Expense Risk
  Fees(2)........                .50%         .50%         .50%       .50%      .50%      .50%       .50%      .50%    .50%
                                ----         ----         ----       ----      ----      ----       ----      ----    ----
 Account Fees and Expenses
 Administrative Charges(2).      .40%         .40%         .40%       .40%      .40%      .40%       .40%      .40%    .40%
 Distribution Ex-
  pense
  Charge(2)......                .35          .35          .35        .35       .35       .35        .35       .35     .35
                                ----         ----         ----       ----      ----      ----       ----      ----    ----
 Total Account
  Fees and
  Expenses.......                .75          .75          .75        .75       .75       .75        .75       .75     .75
                                ----         ----         ----       ----      ----      ----       ----      ----    ----
 Total Separate
  Account
  Expenses.......               1.25%        1.25%        1.25%      1.25%     1.25%       25%      1.25%     1.25%   1.25%
                                ====         ====         ====       ====      ====      ====       ====      ====    ====
Portfolio Company
 Annual Expenses
 (as a percentage
  of portfolio
  company average
  net assets)
 Management
  Fees(3)........                .25%         .50%        .125%       .85%      .51%      .61%       .71%     .475%   .475%
 Other Ex-
  penses(4)......               None         None         None       None       .10       .12        .10%     .095    .085
                                ----         ----         ----       ----      ----      ----       ----      ----    ----
 Total Portfolio
  Company
  Expenses.......                .25%         .50%        .125%       .85%      .61%      .73%(5)    .81%(5)   .57%    .56%
                                ====         ====         ====       ====      ====      ====       ====      ====    ====
<CAPTION>
                                                    Calvert
                                Scudder           Responsibly
                             International  TCI    Invested
                                Class A    Growth  Balanced
                             ------------- ------ ------------
<S>                          <C>           <C>    <C>
Contractowner
 Transaction
 Expenses
 Sales Load
  Imposed on
  Purchases......                None       None     None
 Deferred Sales
    Load.........                None       None     None
 Surrender Fees..                None       None     None
 Exchange Fee....                None       None     None
Annual Contract
 Fee(1)..........                 $24        $24      $24
                             ============= ====== ============
Separate Account
 Annual Expenses
 (as a percentage
  of average
  account value)
 Mortality and
  Expense Risk
  Fees(2)........                 .50%       .50%     .50%
                             ------------- ------ ------------
 Account Fees and Expenses
 Administrative Charges(2).       .40%       .20%     .40%
 Distribution Ex-
  pense
  Charge(2)......                 .35        .35      .35
                             ------------- ------ ------------
 Total Account
  Fees and
  Expenses.......                 .75        .55      .75
                             ------------- ------ ------------
 Total Separate
  Account
  Expenses.......                1.25%      1.05%    1.25%
                             ============= ====== ============
Portfolio Company
 Annual Expenses
 (as a percentage
  of portfolio
  company average
  net assets)
 Management
  Fees(3)........                .875%      1.00%     .70%
 Other Ex-
  penses(4)......                .205       None      .13
                             ------------- ------ ------------
 Total Portfolio
  Company
  Expenses.......                1.08%      1.00%     .83%(6)
                             ============= ====== ============
</TABLE>    
- -------
(1) A monthly amount of $2.00 (but not to exceed 1/12 of 1% of the Account
   Value in any month) is charged with respect to each Participant under a
   Contract, regardless of the number of Investment Alternatives in which the
   Participant is invested. Such amount is deducted from the net assets, if
   any, in one or more of the Participant's Accounts or from such net assets
   which have been allocated to one or more Funds of the Separate Account in
   the order as described in "Charges--Administrative Charges" herein. The
   above table reflects such amount for a full year for each fund or portfolio
   as if no other Investment Alternatives were used. If the General Account is
   used, the fee is deducted from it and there would be no fee with respect to
   amounts allocated to any fund or portfolio. If the General Account is not
   used, but more than one fund or portfolio is used, then the second or
   additional fund(s) or portfolio(s) would not be charged. The employer may
   elect to pay this Additional Amount in which case no amount is deducted
   from the Participant's Account. See "Charges--Administrative Charges."
 
(2) In accordance with a Fund Participation Agreement, TCI reimburses the
   Insurance Company at an annual rate of up to .20% for Administrative
   Expenses. If the Fund Participation Agreement is terminated for sales of
   new Contracts, TCI's reimbursement obligation will terminate, and the
   administrative charge to the TCI Growth Fund will be .40% instead of .20%.
   The Administrative Charges, Distribution Expense Charge and Mortality and
   Expense Risk Fees items are more fully described under "Charges--
   Administrative Charges"; "Charges--Distribution Expense Charge"; and
   "Charges--Mortality and Expense Risk Charge."
 
(3) Management Fees are more fully described in "Charges--Portfolio Company
   Expenses", and in the Prospectuses of the Investment Company, the Fidelity
   Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios, the TCI Growth Fund and the Calvert
   Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio.
 
(4) See "Charges--Portfolio Company Expenses."
   
(5) Certain portfolio trades are directed to brokers who pay a portion of the
   Portfolios' expenses. With this arrangement, total operating expenses for
   the Contrafund and Asset Manager Portfolios for 1995 were .72% and .79%,
   respectively.     
   
(6) Management fees are subject to a performance adjustment, after July 1,
   1996, which could cause the fee to be as high as .85% or as low as .55%,
   depending on performance. Certain fees are paid indirectly, and with this
   reduction total operating expenses for the Portfolio were .81% for 1995.
       
                                       4
<PAGE>
 
EXAMPLES
   
The examples below show the expenses that would be borne by a Participant,
assuming a $1,000 investment and a 5% annual rate of return on assets. No
surrender charge is imposed upon the surrender of a contract, and therefore
the expenses would be the same whether or not the contract is surrendered at
the end of the applicable time period.     
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
                                                1 YEAR 3 YEARS 5 YEARS 10 YEARS
                                                ------ ------- ------- --------
<S>                                             <C>    <C>     <C>     <C>
Example for Investment Company Money Market
Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $18.73 $61.18  $110.42 $269.66
Example for Investment Company All America,
Bond, Short-Term Bond, Mid-Term Bond and Com-
posite Funds
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $21.30 $69.37  $124.90 $303.22
Example for Investment Company Equity Index
Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $17.44 $57.06  $103.11 $252.56
Example for Investment Company Aggressive Eq-
uity Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $24.90 $80.73  $144.87 $348.81
Example for Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $22.43 $72.95  $131.22 $317.72
Example for Fidelity VIP II Contra Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $23.56 $76.53  $137.50 $332.06
Example for Fidelity VIP II Asset Manager Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $24.28 $78.79  $141.47 $341.11
Example for Scudder Capital Growth Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $22.02 $71.65  $128.92 $312.46
Example for Scudder Bond Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $21.92 $71.33  $128.35 $311.15
Example for Scudder International Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $27.25 $88.14  $157.81 $377.91
Example for TCI Growth Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $24.38 $79.12  $142.04 $342.39
Example for Calvert Responsibly Invested Bal-
anced Fund
 You would pay the following expenses on a
  $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual return
  on assets:................................... $24.49 $79.44  $142.61 $343.68
</TABLE>    
   
The purpose of the above table is to assist the Participant in understanding
the various costs and expenses that a Participant will bear, directly or
indirectly, and the table reflects the expenses of the Separate Account as
well as the Investment Company Funds, the Fidelity VIP Equity-Income
Portfolio, the Fidelity VIP II Asset Manager and Contrafund Portfolios, the
Scudder Portfolios, the TCI Growth Fund and the Calvert Responsibly Invested
Balanced Portfolio as they were for the year ended December 31, 1995. ACTUAL
EXPENSES MAY BE GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE ON WHICH THE EXAMPLES WERE BASED.
The annual rate of return assumed in the examples is not an estimate or
guarantee of future investment performance. Each example also assumes an
annual contract fee of $3.10 per $1,000 of value in the Separate Account based
on an average account value of $7,735. See "Charges--Administrative Charges"
for a description of how such fee would be deducted from the Investment
Alternatives.     
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
 
                             
                          UNIT VALUE INFORMATION     
   
Shown below is condensed financial information for an Accumulation Unit
outstanding throughout the ten years during the period ended December 31,
1995. The information with respect to each of the years in the four years
ended December 31, 1995, has been audited by the Funds' independent auditors,
Arthur Andersen LLP. Each of the years in the periods ended December 31, 1991
were audited by the Funds' previous auditors. THE ALL AMERICA FUND (PREVIOUSLY
CALLED THE "STOCK FUND") CHANGED ITS INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES AND
ADDED SUBADVISERS ON MAY 1, 1994. Prior to May 1, 1995, the Calvert
Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio was known as the Calvert Socially
Responsible Series.     
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
                                            INVESTMENT COMPANY MONEY MARKET FUND
                          -------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           1995   1994   1993   1992   1991   1990   1989   1988   1987   1986
                           ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----
<S>                       <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of
year....................  $ 1.72 $ 1.68 $ 1.65 $ 1.62 $ 1.54 $ 1.44 $ 1.33 $ 1.25 $ 1.18 $ 1.12
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of
period..................  $ 1.80 $ 1.72 $ 1.68 $ 1.65 $ 1.62 $ 1.54 $ 1.44 $ 1.33 $ 1.25 $ 1.18
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of
accumulation units
outstanding, end of
period..................  17,502 17,653 15,815 16,545 15,656 13,972  8,570  4,870  2,778  1,514
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
<CAPTION>
                                           INVESTMENT COMPANY ALL AMERICA FUND
                          ---------------------------------------------------------------------
                           1995   1994   1993   1992   1991   1990   1989   1988   1987   1986
                           ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----
<S>                       <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of
 year/period............  $ 3.35 $ 3.36 $ 3.03 $ 2.97 $ 2.41 $ 2.47 $ 1.98 $ 1.82 $ 1.67 $ 1.49
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of peri-
 od.....................  $ 4.52 $ 3.35 $ 3.36 $ 3.03 $ 2.97 $ 2.41 $ 2.47 $ 1.98 $ 1.82 $ 1.67
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of
 accumulation units
 outstanding, end of
 period.................  43,620 38,669 36,510 32,352 26,173 20,973 20,157 20,064 23,919 17,509
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
<CAPTION>
                                              INVESTMENT COMPANY BOND FUND
                          ---------------------------------------------------------------------
                           1995   1994   1993   1992   1991   1990   1989   1988   1987   1986
                           ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----
<S>                       <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>  
Unit value, beginning of
year....................  $ 2.28 $ 2.39 $ 2.13 $ 1.99 $ 1.73 $ 1.67 $ 1.49 $ 1.40 $ 1.42 $ 1.28
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of
period..................  $ 2.69 $ 2.28 $ 2.39 $ 2.13 $ 1.99 $ 1.73 $ 1.67 $ 1.49 $ 1.40 $ 1.42
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of
accumulation units
outstanding, end of
period..................  12,083 10,601 12,244  9,203  6,152  5,235  4,164  3,057  2,631  2,103
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
<CAPTION>
                                            INVESTMENT COMPANY COMPOSITE FUND
                          ---------------------------------------------------------------------
                           1995   1994   1993   1992   1991   1990   1989   1988   1987   1986
                           ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----
<S>                       <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of
year....................  $ 2.82 $ 2.95 $ 2.55 $ 2.43 $ 2.08 $ 2.04 $ 1.73 $ 1.60 $ 1.51 $ 1.35
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of
period..................  $ 3.39 $ 2.82 $ 2.95 $ 2.55 $ 2.43 $ 2.08 $ 2.04 $ 1.73 $ 1.60 $ 1.51
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of
accumulation units
outstanding, end of
period..................  70,558 73,239 71,215 50,944 43,115 37,461 32,716 29,436 28,126 20,079
                          ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
</TABLE>    
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
 
 
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
    INVESTMENT         INVESTMENT        INVESTMENT      INVESTMENT
     COMPANY             COMPANY           COMPANY        COMPANY
   EQUITY INDEX        SHORT-TERM         MID-TERM       AGGRESSIVE
       FUND             BOND FUND         BOND FUND     EQUITY FUND               SCUDDER BOND FUND
- ------------------- ----------------- ----------------- ------------ --------------------------------------------
 1995   1994  1993* 1995  1994  1993* 1995  1994  1993*  1995  1994*  1995   1994   1993  1992  1991  1990  1989
- ------  ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- -----  ----  -----  ----   ----   ----  ----  ----  ----  ----
<S>     <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>
$ 1.05  $1.05 $1.00 $1.03 $1.03 $1.00 $1.01 $1.06 $1.00 $ 1.05 $1.00 $ 9.69 $10.32 $ 9.30 $8.78 $7.54 $7.05 $6.39
======  ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ====== ===== ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
$ 1.42  $1.05 $1.05 $1.10 $1.03 $1.03 $1.16 $1.01 $1.06 $ 1.43 $1.05 $11.30 $ 9.69 $10.32 $9.30 $8.78 $7.54 $7.05
======  ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ====== ===== ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
17,109  4,644 2,135 1,447 1,132   747 2,848 1,444 1,411 20,858 9,145  1,269  1,169  1,277 1,053   600   354   221
======  ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ====== ===== ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
</TABLE>    
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
          SCUDDER CAPITAL GROWTH FUND                      SCUDDER INTERNATIONAL FUND
- ------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------
 1995    1994   1993   1992   1991   1990   1989   1995   1994   1993  1992  1991  1990  1989
 ----    ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----   ----  ----  ----  ----  ----
<S>     <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>
$14.67  $16.46 $13.80 $13.09 $ 9.48 $10.35 $ 8.53 $10.08 $11.06 $ 8.13 $8.48 $7.68 $8.41 $6.14
======  ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
$18.64  $14.67 $16.46 $13.80 $13.09 $ 9.48 $10.35 $11.85 $10.08 $11.06 $8.13 $8.48 $7.68 $8.41
======  ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
 8,556   8,121  6,582  3,698  2,138  1,103    844  7,269  8,610  5,400 2,262 1,849 1,644   721
======  ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
</TABLE>    
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
                                                                           FIDELITY
                                                                              VIP      FIDELITY     FIDELITY
                                                 CALVERT RESPONSIBLY        EQUITY-     VIP II    VIP II ASSET
             TCI GROWTH FUND                   INVESTED BALANCED FUND     INCOME FUND CONTRA FUND  MANAGER FUND
- ------------------------------------------- ----------------------------- ----------- ----------- -------------
 1995   1994  1993  1992  1991  1990  1989  1995  1994  1993  1992  1991*    1995*       1995*        1995*
 ----   ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  ----  -----    -----       -----        -----
<S>     <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>         <C>         <C>
$ 9.39  $9.61 $8.81 $9.01 $6.40 $6.53 $5.11 $1.57 $1.64 $1.54 $1.44 $1.32   $16.30      $11.43       $14.04
======  ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== =====   ======      ======       ======
$12.18  $9.39 $9.61 $8.81 $9.01 $6.40 $6.53 $2.01 $1.57 $1.64 $1.54 $1.44   $19.43      $13.85       $15.66
======  ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== =====   ======      ======       ======
 8,061  6,361 5,946 5,280 3,056 1,518   791 7,849 5,986 5,151 2,742   678      728       1,792          184
======  ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== ===== =====   ======      ======       ======
</TABLE>    
   
*The dates the Funds of the Separate Account commenced operation are as
 follows: Investment Company Money Market, All America (previously "Stock"),
 Bond and Composite Funds--January 1, 1985; Scudder Capital Growth, Bond and
 International Funds and TCI Growth Fund--January 3, 1989; Calvert Responsibly
 Invested Balanced Fund--May 13, 1991; Investment Company Equity Index, Short-
 Term Bond and Mid-Term Bonds Funds--February 5, 1993; Investment Company
 Aggressive Equity Fund--May 2, 1994; and Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Fund, and
 Fidelity VIP II Contra and Asset Manager Funds--May 1, 1995.     
 
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
 
                                  DEFINITIONS
   
Accumulation Period--For each Participant, the period from the date
compensation is deferred under a Contract to the Annuity Commencement Date, or
other payment date.     
   
Accumulation Unit--A measure used to calculate the value of a Participant's
interest in each of the Funds of the Separate Account prior to the Annuity
Commencement Date. Each Fund of the Separate Account has its own distinct
Accumulation Unit value.     
   
Annuity Commencement Date--The date on which a Participant's Benefit Payments
begin. Sometimes referred to by the Insurance Company as Benefit Commencement
Date.     
   
Benefit Payments--A series of payments (other than payments made solely to
comply with minimum distribution requirements of applicable tax laws) under a
Contract for life, for a minimum period of time, or for the joint lifetime of
the Participant, such Participant's Eligible Spouse, and thereafter for the
life of the survivor, or for such other specified period.     
   
Benefit Period--The period, beginning at the Annuity Commencement Date, during
which Benefit Payments are received by a Participant.     
   
Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio--The Calvert Responsibly
Invested Balanced Portfolio of Acacia Capital Corporation.     
   
Code--The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.     
   
Contract(s)--One (or more) of the group variable accumulation annuity
contracts described in this Prospectus.     
   
Contractholder--The entity to which the Insurance Company has issued a
Contract. The Contractholder of a Contract may be a State, a political
subdivision of the State, the agent or instrumentality of the State or the
agent or instrumentality of the political subdivision of the State or any
other organization (other than a governmental unit) exempt from taxation under
the Code.     
   
Deferred Compensation Amounts--The amounts deferred from a Participant's
compensation from time to time under the Plan and remitted to the Insurance
Company on his or her behalf under the Contract.     
   
Eligible Spouse--The person to whom a Participant is legally married at the
earlier of the Participant's (a) Annuity Commencement Date, or (b) date of
death.     
   
Fidelity Portfolios--The Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Portfolio and the Fidelity
VIP II Contrafund and Asset Manager Portfolios.     
   
Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Portfolio--The Equity-Income Portfolio of the
Variable Insurance Products Fund.     
   
Fidelity VIP II Contrafund and Asset Manager Portfolios--The Contrafund
Portfolio and Asset Manager Portfolio of the Variable Insurance Products Fund
II.     
   
Fund--According to the context, one of the sixteen subaccounts of the Separate
Account or one of the eight investment portfolios of the Investment Company.
       
General Account--All of the assets of the Insurance Company that are not in a
separate account, but rather are held as part of its general assets.     
   
Insurance Company--Mutual of America Life Insurance Company.     
   
Investment Alternatives--The General Account, and the sixteen distinct Funds
comprising the Separate Account, namely, the Funds which invest in the Money
Market, All America, Equity Index, Bond, Short-Term Bond, Mid-Term Bond,
Composite and Aggressive Equity Funds of the Investment Company, in the three
Fidelity Portfolios, in the three Scudder Portfolios, in the TCI Growth Fund
and in the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio. Under the
Contracts, a Participant may allocate Deferred Compensation among all of the
Investment Alternatives.     
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
 
   
Investment Company--Mutual of America Investment Corporation.     
   
Participant--An employee or former employee of the employer who is entitled to
any benefit in accordance with the Plan.     
   
Participant's Account Balance (or Account Balance)--The sum of the dollar
values of the Accumulation Units credited to a Participant in the Separate
Account and the value of amounts accumulated for the benefit of that
Participant in the General Account.     
   
Plan--An eligible deferred compensation plan meeting the requirements of
Section 457 of the Code under which benefits are to be provided to a
Participant.     
   
Plan Year--The twelve-month period beginning each January 1.     
   
Portfolio Companies--The Investment Company, Variable Insurance Products Fund,
Variable Insurance Products Fund II, Scudder Variable Life Investment Fund,
TCI Portfolios, Inc. and Acacia Capital Corporation.     
   
Salary Reduction Agreement--The agreement, signed by the employee and
submitted to the employer, which specifies the amount of Compensation which
shall be considered a Deferred Compensation Amount under the Plan and which
shall be remitted to the Insurance Company on behalf of the Participant.     
   
Scudder Portfolios--The following three portfolios of Scudder Variable Life
Investment Fund, namely, the Scudder Capital Growth Portfolio, the Scudder
Bond Portfolio and the Scudder International Portfolio.     
   
Separate Account--Mutual of America Separate Account No. 2, a separate
investment account established by the Insurance Company to receive and invest
Deferred Compensation deposits made under variable accumulation annuity
contracts and other variable contracts (it being possible that the Separate
Account could in the future be used to fund variable life insurance policies).
The Separate Account is set aside and kept separate from the other assets of
the Insurance Company.     
   
TCI Growth Fund--The TCI Growth Fund of TCI Portfolios, Inc.     
   
Valuation Day--Each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open for business,
other than the Friday following Thanksgiving and, for 1996, Friday July 5 and
Thursday December 26.     
   
Valuation Period--The period beginning on the close of business of each
Valuation Day and ending on the close of business on the next Valuation Day.
    
                                       9
<PAGE>
 
                                    SUMMARY
   
The Following Summary of Prospectus Information Should Be Read In Conjunction
With The Detailed Information Appearing Elsewhere In This Prospectus.     
 
CONTRACT OFFERED
   
The group variable accumulation annuity contract offered by this Prospectus is
issued by the Insurance Company and designed to aid in retirement and long-
term financial planning. The Contract provides for the accumulation of
Deferred Compensation Amounts on a completely variable basis, a completely
fixed basis or a combination variable and fixed basis. Benefit Payments under
the Contract will be made on a fixed basis only. Benefit payments will be made
by the Insurance Company to the Contractholder which shall be responsible for
distributing such payments to Participants. If the Contractholder agrees, the
Insurance Company may make benefit payments directly to Participants for the
Contractholder. The Contract is summarized as a group contract designed for
use in connection with deferred compensation plans adopted pursuant to Section
457 of the Code by certain organizations that qualify to be Contractholders,
as defined above. The Contracts are issued to each Contractholder and are
owned by the Contractholder. Sums accumulated by Participants are regarded as
claims of a general creditor of the Contractholder. Participation in the
deferred compensation plan is entirely voluntary unless the Contractholder
elects otherwise. Participants under Contracts may obtain certain Federal
income tax benefits provided under Section 457 of the Code (see "Federal Tax
Matters").     
 
REMITTANCES
   
In general, under the Plan, compensation may be deferred in whatever amounts
and at whatever frequency is desired by Participants. In certain instances,
the Plan may provide that Plan expenses, such as accounting, legal or
consulting fees, are borne by the Participant. Under the Contract, the
Contractholder may remit Deferred Compensation Amounts from time to time.
Under the Plan such remittance should be made within seven days but no later
than one month after the date on which such Amounts are first available to the
Contractholder for remittance. The minimum deferral that may be remitted to
the Insurance Company under a Contract is $10. The maximum annual deferral is
that amount permitted under the Code (see "The Group Contract--Allocations of
Deferred Compensation Deposits").     
   
Participants under the Contracts may allocate Deferred Compensation Amounts
among the Investment Alternatives provided in the Contract, which include the
General Account and the sixteen distinct Funds of the Separate Account.     
   
This Prospectus is intended as a disclosure document for the variable portion
of the Contracts only. See "The General Account" for a brief summary of the
fixed portion of the Contracts.     
 
THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT
   
Deferred Compensation Amounts remitted pursuant to the Contracts and allocated
on a variable basis become part of the Separate Account. The Separate Account
is divided into sixteen Funds, or sub-accounts, each one of which corresponds
to one of the eight Funds of the Investment Company, or one of the three
Fidelity Portfolios, or one of the three Scudder Portfolios, or the TCI Growth
Fund, or the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio, in which
Separate Account assets are invested. The objective of the variable
accumulation aspect of the Contract is to provide a return on amounts
contributed that will reflect the investment experience of the chosen Funds.
The value of the Deferred Compensation Amounts accumulated for a Participant
in the Separate Account prior to the Annuity Commencement Date will vary with
the investment experience of the chosen Funds.     
 
 
                                      10
<PAGE>
 
THE INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVES
   
The Investment Alternatives to which Contributions may be allocated are the
General Account and the sixteen Funds of the Separate Account, which invest in
the eight separate investment funds of Mutual of America Investment
Corporation: the Money Market Fund, which invests in money market instruments
and other short-term debt securities; the All America Fund, which invests
approximately 60% of its assets in publicly traded common stocks in the same
manner as the Equity Index Fund (see below) and approximately 40% of its
assets in other publicly traded common stocks; the Aggressive Equity Fund,
which also invests in publicly traded common stocks; the Bond Fund, which
invests in publicly traded debt securities; the Short-Term Bond Fund which
invests in publicly traded debt securities which will produce a portfolio with
an average maturity of one to three years; the Mid-Term Bond Fund which
invests in publicly traded debt securities which will produce a portfolio with
an average maturity of three to seven years; the Composite Fund, which invests
in all of the above types of investments; and the Equity Index Fund which
invests in publicly traded common stocks comparable to the Standard & Poor's
Composite Index of 500 Stocks* (the "S&P 500 Index"); the Fidelity VIP Equity-
Income Portfolio, which invests primarily in income-producing equity
securities; the Fidelity VIP II Contrafund Portfolio, which invests mainly in
securities of companies that are undervalued or out-of-favor; and Fidelity VIP
II Asset Manager Portfolio, which allocates its assets among domestic and
foreign stocks, bonds and short-term fixed-income instruments; the following
three portfolios of Scudder Variable Life Investment Fund: the Scudder Capital
Growth Portfolio, Class A Shares, which invests primarily in publicly traded
equity securities; the Scudder Bond Portfolio, Class A Shares, which invests
primarily in publicly traded debt securities; and the Scudder International
Portfolio, Class A Shares, which invests primarily in marketable foreign
equity securities; in the TCI Growth Fund of TCI Portfolios, Inc., which
invests primarily in publicly traded common stocks; and in the Calvert
Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio of Acacia Capital Corporation, which
invests in stocks, bonds and money market instruments selected with a concern
for the social impact of each investment. At the date of this Prospectus,
investment of Contributions in certain of the Investment Alternatives
(including the Funds corresponding to the Fidelity Portfolios) may not,
because certain pending state insurance department approvals have not yet been
received, be made by certain Participants in certain states. (See "Investments
of the Separate Account.")     
 
REINVESTMENT
   
Distributions of the Portfolio Companies to the Separate Account are
automatically reinvested in additional Portfolio Company shares at net asset
value.     
 
CHARGES
   
Certain charges will be deducted in connection with the operation of the
Contracts and the Separate Account.     
   
Administrative Charges. The Insurance Company will make a deduction each
Valuation Day from the net assets of each Fund of the Separate Account for
administrative expenses at an annual rate of .40%, except that in the case of
the Fund of the Separate Account which invests in the TCI Growth Fund, the
annual rate shall be .20% (TCI reimburses the Insurance Company at an
additional annual rate of up to .20% for administrative expenses). An
additional deduction for administrative expenses of $2.00 per month will also
be made with respect to each Participant under a Contract except that such
charge shall not exceed     
   
    
- --------
* "Standard & Poor's 500," "S&P" and "S&P 500" are trademarks of Standard &
 Poor's Corporation. The Fund is not sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by
 Standard & Poor's Corporation. Refer to the Mutual of America Investment
 Corporation Prospectus for a complete description of the disclaimers and
 limitations relating to Standard & Poor's Corporation.
 
 
                                      11
<PAGE>
 
1/12 of 1% of the Account Value in any month. Such amount will be deducted
from the net assets, if any, in the Participant's Account which have been
allocated to the General Account. If no net assets have been
allocated to such Account, such amount will be deducted from the net assets
which have been allocated to one or more Funds of the Separate Account in the
following order: (a) Investment Company Money Market Fund, (b) Investment
Company Short-Term Bond Fund, (c) Investment Company Mid-Term Bond Fund, (d)
Investment Company Bond Fund, (e) Scudder Bond Fund, (f) Investment Company
Composite Fund, (g) Fidelity VIP II Asset Manager Fund, (h) Calvert
Responsibly Invested Balanced Fund, (i) Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Fund, (j)
Investment Company All America Fund, (k) Investment Company Equity Index Fund,
(l) Fidelity VIP II Contrafund Fund, (m) Investment Company Aggressive Equity
Fund, (n) Scudder Capital Growth Fund, (o) Scudder International Fund, and (p)
TCI Growth Fund. These daily and monthly charges may increase or decrease
during the life of the Contract, but may not exceed costs. The employer may
elect to pay this additional deduction in which case no amount is deducted
from the Participant's Account (see "Charges--Administrative Charges").
   
Distribution Expense Charge. The Insurance Company will make a deduction each
Valuation Day from the net assets of each Fund of the Separate Account for
expenses associated with the distribution of the Contracts at an annual rate
of .35% (see "Charges--Distribution Expense Charge").     
   
Mortality and Expense Risk Charge. For assuming certain mortality risks under
the Contracts, the Insurance Company will make a deduction each Valuation Day
at an annual rate of .35% of the net assets of each Fund of the Separate
Account. The Mortality Risk Charge is guaranteed not to increase during the
life of the Contract. For assuming certain expense risks under the Contracts
with respect to expenses it expects to incur over the life of the Contracts,
the Insurance Company will make a deduction each Valuation Day at an annual
rate of .15% of the net assets of each Fund of the Separate Account (see
"Charges--Mortality and Expense Risk Charge").     
          
Portfolio Company Expenses. The value of the assets in the Separate Account
will reflect the value of the shares of the Portfolio Companies in which such
assets are invested, and therefore the fees and expenses paid by the
Investment Company, Fidelity Portfolios, Scudder Portfolios, TCI Growth Fund,
or Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio, as the case may be. A
complete description of the expenses and deductions from the Investment
Company Funds, Fidelity Portfolios, Scudder Portfolios, TCI Growth Fund and
the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio is found in their
respective prospectuses attached to this Prospectus.     
 
TRANSFERS AND WITHDRAWALS
   
A Plan may provide that at any time prior to the Annuity Commencement Date, a
Participant under a Contract may transfer any or all of the Participant's
Account Balance from the Separate Account to the General Account, or from the
General Account to the Separate Account, or among the Funds of the Separate
Account (see "Transfers Among Investment Alternatives"). In addition, a Plan
may provide that a Participant may withdraw all or a portion of the
Participant's Account Balance in the event of an "Unforeseen Emergency" (see
"Withdrawals").     
   
No charge is currently assessed for transfers or withdrawals made under the
Contracts. The Insurance Company reserves the right, however, to impose a
charge for transfers or withdrawals in the future.     
 
                                      12
<PAGE>
 
CONTACTING THE INSURANCE COMPANY
   
All written requests and notices required by the Contracts, and any questions
or inquiries, should be addressed to:     
 
                   Mutual of America Life Insurance Company
                               Thomas A. Harwood
                  Senior Vice President, Field Administration
                      National Service Support Department
                                
                             320 Park Avenue     
                            
                         New York, New York 10022     
 
or to your appropriate Regional Office. You can check the address for your
Regional Office by calling the following number: 800-468-3785.
 
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
   
The Insurance Company is a mutual life insurance company organized under the
laws of the State of New York. The Insurance Company is the successor to
National Health & Welfare Retirement Association, Inc., which was incorporated
in 1945 as a nonprofit retirement system pursuant to the then Section 200 of
the New York Insurance Law for the sole purpose of providing retirement and
other benefits for employees of nonprofit organizations in the health and
welfare field. From December 31, 1978 to January 3, 1984, the Insurance
Company was known as National Health & Welfare Mutual Life Insurance
Association, Inc. The Insurance Company currently is authorized to transact
business in 50 states and the District of Columbia. The address of the
Insurance Company's home office is 320 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022.
       
The Insurance Company engages in the sale of pension, retirement and related
benefits on both a group and an individual basis for employees of not-for-
profit, social welfare, charitable, religious, educational and government
organizations. The Insurance Company invests the assets it derives from its
business in the manner permitted under applicable state law. In this
connection, the Insurance Company has had over 25 years of experience in
managing a broad range of investments. As of December 31, 1995, the Insurance
Company on a consolidated basis had total assets of approximately $8.2
billion. The Insurance Company is registered as a broker-dealer under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and also is registered as an investment
adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.     
   
The Insurance Company's operations as a life insurance company are reviewed
periodically by various independent rating agencies such as A.M. Best &
Company, Standard and Poor's Insurance Rating Service, Moody's Investor
Services and Duff & Phelps Credit Rating Company. Such agencies publish their
ratings. From time to time the Insurance Company reprints and distributes
these rating reports in whole or in part or summaries of them to be given to
the public. The ratings concern the Insurance Company's operation as a life
insurance company and do not imply any guarantees of performance of the
Separate Account.     
 
                                      13
<PAGE>
 
                             THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT
   
The Separate Account was established pursuant to a resolution adopted by the
Board of Directors of the Insurance Company on September 22, 1983. The
Separate Account is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission
("Commission") as a unit investment trust under the Investment Company Act of
1940 ("1940 Act"). Registration with the Commission does not involve
supervision of management or investment practices or policies of the Separate
Account or the Insurance Company by the Commission.     
   
The Separate Account is divided into sixteen distinct Funds corresponding to
the funds or portfolios of the Portfolio Companies in which the assets in such
Funds are or will be invested. The assets of the Separate Account are the
property of the Insurance Company. The Separate Account assets attributable to
the Contracts and to other annuity contracts funded by the Separate Account
are not chargeable with liabilities arising out of any other business the
Insurance Company may conduct. The income, capital gains and capital losses of
each Fund of the Separate Account are credited to or charged against the net
assets held in that Fund, without regard to the income, capital gains and
capital losses arising out of the business conducted by any other Funds of the
Separate Account or out of any other business that the Insurance Company may
conduct.     
   
The Insurance Company does not guarantee the investment performance of the
Separate Account as a whole, or any of the Funds. The amount credited to a
Participant in the Separate Account, and thus the amount available to provide
periodic benefits, will depend upon the value of the assets held in the
Fund(s) of the Separate Account selected by the Participant. Accordingly, the
Participant bears the full investment risk for all amounts allocated to the
Separate Account.     
   
The Separate Account and the Insurance Company are subject to supervision and
regulation by the Superintendent of Insurance of the State of New York, and by
the insurance regulatory authorities of each State in which it is licensed to
do business.     
 
                      INVESTMENTS OF THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT
   
Deferred Compensation Amounts will be allocated among one or more Funds of the
Separate Account for investment at net asset value in shares of the Funds of
the Investment Company, the Fidelity Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios, the
TCI Growth Fund, or the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio,
selected by the Participant. A summary of investment objectives of the
Portfolio Companies invested in by the Funds of the Separate Account follows.
More detailed information, including risks, charges and expenses, may be found
in the current prospectuses for Mutual of America Investment Corporation, the
Fidelity Portfolios, Scudder Variable Life Investment Fund, TCI Growth Fund
and the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio, which are attached to
this Prospectus. Each applicable prospectus should be read for a complete
evaluation of the Investment Alternatives. Investments in the Money Market
Fund and in the other Portfolio Companies are neither insured nor guaranteed
by the U.S. Government.     
 
MONEY MARKET FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The investment objective of the Money Market Fund is the realization of high
current income to the extent consistent with the maintenance of liquidity,
investment quality and stability of capital. The Money Market Fund will invest
only in money market instruments and other short-term securities.     
 
ALL AMERICA FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The investment objective for approximately 60% of the assets of the All
America Fund (the "Indexed Assets") is to provide investment results that to
the extent practical correspond to the price and yield performance of publicly
traded common stocks in the aggregate, as represented by the S&P 500 Index.
The Indexed Assets will be invested in the same manner as the Equity Index
Fund.     
 
 
                                      14
<PAGE>
 
   
The investment objective for the remaining approximately 40% of the assets
(the "Active Assets") is to achieve a high level of total return, through both
appreciation of capital and, to a lesser extent, current income, by means of a
diversified portfolio of securities that may include common stocks, securities
convertible into common stocks, bonds and money market instruments. The Active
Assets are invested by three subadvisers and Mutual of America Capital
Management Corporation (the "Adviser"). The Adviser allocates the Active
Assets to maintain, to the extent practicable under current market conditions,
approximately equal amounts among the subadvisers and the Adviser. See
"Charges--Portfolio Company Expenses".     
 
EQUITY INDEX FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The investment objective of the Equity Index Fund is to provide investment
results to the extent practical that correspond to the price and yield
performance of publicly traded common stocks in the aggregate, as represented
by the S&P 500 Index.     
 
BOND FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The primary investment objective of the Bond Fund is to provide as high a
level of current income over time as is believed to be consistent with prudent
investment risk. A secondary objective is preservation of capital. The assets
of the Bond Fund will consist primarily of publicly-traded debt securities,
such as bonds, notes, debentures and equipment trust certificates. The Bond
Fund generally will invest primarily in securities rated in the four highest
categories by a nationally recognized rating service or in instruments of
comparable quality. The Bond Fund may also invest to a limited extent in
lower-rated or unrated securities, and these may be subject to greater market
and financial risk than higher quality (lower yield) issues.     
 
SHORT-TERM BOND FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The primary investment objective of the Short-Term Bond Fund is to provide as
high a level of current income over time as is believed to be consistent with
prudent investment risk. A secondary objective is preservation of capital. The
assets of the Short-Term Bond Fund will consist primarily of publicly-traded
debt securities, such as bonds, notes, debentures and equipment trust
certificates which will produce a portfolio with an average maturity of one to
three years. The Short-Term Bond Fund generally will invest primarily in
securities rated in the four highest categories by a nationally recognized
rating service or in instruments of comparable quality. The Short-Term Bond
Fund may also invest to a limited extent in lower-rated or unrated securities,
and these may be subject to greater market and financial risk than higher
quality (lower yield) issues.     
 
MID-TERM BOND FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The primary investment objective of the Mid-Term Bond Fund is to provide as
high a level of current income over time as is believed to be consistent with
prudent investment risk. A secondary objective is preservation of capital. The
assets of the Mid-Term Bond Fund will consist primarily of publicly-traded
debt securities, such as bonds, notes, debentures and equipment trust
certificates which will produce a portfolio with an average maturity of three
to seven years. The Mid-Term Bond Fund generally will invest primarily in
securities rated in the four highest categories by a nationally recognized
rating service or in instruments of comparable quality. The Mid-Term Bond Fund
may also invest to a limited extent in lower-rated or unrated securities, and
these may be subject to greater market and financial risk than higher quality
(lower yield) issues.     
 
COMPOSITE FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The investment objective of the Composite Fund is to achieve as high a total
rate of return, through both appreciation of capital and current income, as is
consistent with prudent investment risk by means of a diversified portfolio of
publicly-traded common stocks, publicly-traded debt securities and money
market     
 
                                      15
<PAGE>
 
instruments. The Fund will seek to achieve long-term growth of its capital and
increasing income by investments in common stock and other equity-type
securities, and a high level of current income through investments in
publicly-traded debt securities and money market instruments.
 
AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY
   
The Aggressive Equity Fund will be divided by the Adviser into two segments so
as to utilize two investment styles.     
   
The investment objective for approximately 50% of the assets of the Fund (the
"Aggressive Growth Portfolio") is to achieve capital appreciation by investing
in companies believed to possess above-average growth potential. Growth can be
in the areas of earnings or gross sales which can be measured in either
dollars or in unit volume. Growth potential is often sought in smaller, less
well-known companies in new and emerging areas of the economy, but may also be
found in large companies in mature or declining industries that have been
revitalized and hold a strong industry or market position. See "Charges--
Portfolio Company Expenses".     
   
The investment objective for the other approximately 50% of the assets of the
Fund (the "Aggressive Value Portfolio") is to achieve capital appreciation by
investing in companies believed to possess valuable assets or whose securities
are undervalued in the marketplace in relation to factors such as the
company's assets, earnings, or growth potential.     
 
FIDELITY VIP EQUITY-INCOME PORTFOLIO
   
Equity-Income Portfolio seeks reasonable income by investing primarily in
income-producing equity securities. In choosing these securities, the
Portfolio will also consider the potential for capital appreciation. The
Portfolio's goal is to achieve a yield which exceeds the composite yield on
the securities comprising the S&P 500 Index.     
 
FIDELITY VIP II CONTRAFUND PORTFOLIO
   
Contrafund Portfolio is a growth fund. It seeks to increase the value of an
investment in the Portfolio over the long term by investing mainly in
securities of companies that are undervalued or out-of-favor. These securities
may be issued by domestic or foreign companies and many may not be well known.
The Portfolio usually invests primarily in common stock and securities
convertible into common stock, but it has the flexibility to invest in any
type of security that may produce capital appreciation.     
 
FIDELITY VIP II ASSET MANAGER PORTFOLIO
   
Asset Manager Portfolio seeks high total return with reduced risk over the
long term by allocating its assets among domestic and foreign stocks, bonds
and short-term fixed-income instruments. The Portfolio's adviser will normally
allocate the Portfolio's assets among the three asset classes within the
following investment parameters: 0-70% in short-term instruments; 20-60% in
bonds; and 10-60% in stocks. The expected "neutral mix", which the Portfolio's
adviser would expect over the long term, is 20% in short-term instruments, 40%
in bonds and 40% in stocks.     
   
SCUDDER CAPITAL GROWTH PORTFOLIO CLASS A SHARES     
   
The Scudder Capital Growth Portfolio seeks to maximize long-term capital
growth through a broad and flexible investment program. The Portfolio invests
in marketable securities, principally common stocks and, consistent with its
objective of long-term capital growth, preferred stocks. However, in order to
reduce risk, as market or economic conditions periodically warrant, the
Portfolio may also invest up to 25% of its assets in short-term debt
instruments.     
 
 
                                      16
<PAGE>
 
   
SCUDDER BOND PORTFOLIO CLASS A SHARES     
   
The Scudder Bond Portfolio pursues a policy of investing for a high level of
income consistent with a high quality portfolio of securities. Under normal
circumstances, the Portfolio invests at least 65% of its assets in bonds,
including U.S. Government and agency, corporate and other notes and bonds
paying high current income. Not less than 80% of the debt obligations in which
the Portfolio invests will be rated, at the time of purchase, within the three
highest categories by a nationally recognized rating service or in instruments
of comparable quality. The Portfolio may also invest to a limited extent in
lower-rated securities, and these may be subject to greater market and
financial risk than higher quality (lower yield) issues.     
   
SCUDDER INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO CLASS A SHARES     
   
The Scudder International Portfolio seeks long-term growth of capital
primarily through diversified holdings of marketable foreign equity
investments. The Portfolio invests primarily in equity securities of
established companies which do business primarily outside the United States
and which are listed on foreign exchanges. Investing in foreign securities may
involve a greater degree of risk than investing in domestic securities.     
 
TCI GROWTH FUND
   
The TCI Growth Fund seeks capital growth by investing primarily in common
stocks (including securities convertible into common stock). It may purchase
securities only of companies that have a record of at least three years'
continuous operation and such securities must enjoy a fair degree of
marketability. All securities must be listed on major stock exchanges or
traded over-the-counter.     
 
CALVERT RESPONSIBLY INVESTED BALANCED PORTFOLIO
   
Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio seeks to achieve a total
return above the rate of inflation through an actively managed diversified
portfolio of common and preferred stocks, bonds and money market instruments
selected with a concern for the social impact of each investment.     
 
SHARED FUND ARRANGEMENTS
   
Shares of the Fidelity Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios, the TCI Growth Fund
and the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio (together, the "Shared
Funds") currently are available to the separate accounts of a number of
insurance companies. The Board of Directors of each Shared Fund is responsible
for monitoring that Fund for the existence of any material irreconcilable
conflict between the interests of the policyowners of all separate accounts
investing in the Fund and determining what action, if any, should be taken in
response. If the Insurance Company believes that a Shared Fund's response to
any of those events insufficiently protects Contractholders, it will take
appropriate action. If any material irreconcilable conflict arises, the
Investment Alternatives may be modified or reduced. See "Charter--FMR and its
Affiliates" in the Fidelity Portfolios prospectus, "Investment Concept of the
Fund" in the Scudder Variable Life Investment Fund prospectus, "Shareholders
of TCI Portfolios" in the TCI Growth Fund prospectus and "Purchase and
Redemption of Shares" in the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio
prospectus for a further discussion of the risks associated with the offering
of Shared Fund shares to the Separate Account and the separate accounts of
other insurance companies.     
 
                                      17
<PAGE>
 
                                    CHARGES
   
The values of Accumulation Units reflect a deduction on each Valuation Day for
administrative and distribution expenses, and the mortality and expense risk
assumed by the Insurance Company. The following charges will be deducted on a
daily basis (based on annual rates) in determining the Accumulation Unit value
for each of the Funds of the Separate Account.     
 
ADMINISTRATIVE CHARGES
   
The Insurance Company performs all administrative functions in connection with
the Contracts, including receiving and allocating Deferred Compensation
Amounts remitted in accordance with the Contracts, making Benefit Payments as
they become due, and preparing and filing all reports required to be filed by
the Separate Account. Expenses incurred by the Insurance Company in connection
with its administrative functions include, but are not limited to, items such
as state or other taxes, salaries, rent, postage, telephone, travel, office
equipment, costs of outside legal, actuarial, accounting and other outside
professional services, and costs associated with determining the net asset
value of the Separate Account.     
   
The Insurance Company will make a deduction each Valuation Day from the value
of the net assets in each Fund of the Separate Account for administrative
expenses (the provisions of the Contracts include the amount of this charge
with the Distribution Expense Charge, described below) at an annual rate of
 .40%, except that in the case of the Fund of the Separate Account which
invests in the TCI Growth Portfolio, the annual rate shall be .20% (TCI
reimburses the Insurance Company at an additional annual rate of up to .20%
for administrative expenses). An additional deduction for administrative
expenses of $2.00 will be made on the next to last Valuation Day of the month
or on another Valuation Day on or about that time that is administratively
convenient from each Participant's Account except that such charge shall not
exceed 1/12 of 1% of the Account Value in any month. Such amount will be
deducted from the net assets, if any, in the Participant's Account which have
been allocated to the General Account. If no net assets have been allocated to
such Account, such amount will be deducted from the net assets which have been
allocated to one or more Funds of the Separate Account in the following order:
(a) Investment Company Money Market Fund, (b) Investment Company Short-Term
Bond Fund, (c) Investment Company Mid-Term Bond Fund, (d) Investment Company
Bond Fund, (e) Scudder Bond Fund, (f) Investment Company Composite Fund, (g)
Fidelity VIP II Asset Manager Fund, (h) Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced
Fund, (i) Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Fund, (j) Investment Company All America
Fund, (k) Investment Company Equity Index Fund, (l) Fidelity VIP II Contrafund
Fund, (m) Investment Company Aggressive Equity Fund, (n) Scudder Capital
Growth Fund, (o) Scudder International Fund, and (p) TCI Growth Fund. The
employer may elect to pay this additional deduction in which case no amount is
deducted from the Participant's Account. THE INSURANCE COMPANY MAY INCREASE OR
DECREASE THESE DAILY AND MONTHLY CHARGES DURING THE LIFE OF THE CONTRACT, BUT
THESE CHARGES MAY NOT EXCEED COSTS.     
 
DISTRIBUTION EXPENSE CHARGE
   
As principal underwriter, the Insurance Company performs all distribution and
sales functions and bears all distribution and sales expenses relative to the
Contracts. These expenses include the payment of that portion of the salaries
of registered representatives of the Insurance Company attributable to the
sale and distribution of Contracts, as well as expenses for preparation of
sales literature and other promotional activities.     
   
The Insurance Company will make a deduction each Valuation Day from the value
of the net assets in each Fund of the Separate Account, at an annual rate of
 .35% to cover anticipated distribution expenses, not to exceed, with respect
to any Participant, 9% of the total Deferred Compensation Amounts.     
 
                                      18
<PAGE>
 
MORTALITY AND EXPENSE RISK CHARGE
   
The Insurance Company assumes certain mortality and expense risks under the
Contracts. The mortality risks arise from the Insurance Company's guarantees
in the Contracts to make Benefit Payments in certain instances in accordance
with benefit tables provided in the Contracts, regardless of how long a
Participant lives and regardless of any improvement in life expectancy
generally. Thus, the Insurance Company assumes the risk that Participants, as
a class, may live longer than has been actuarially estimated, so that payments
will continue for longer than had been anticipated. This assumption of risk by
the Insurance Company relieves Participants of the risk that they will outlive
the funds that have been accumulated for their retirement.     
   
For assuming the mortality risks associated with the Contracts, the Insurance
Company will, each Valuation Day, make a deduction at an annual rate of .35%
of the value of the net assets in each Fund. This charge will apply with
respect to a Participant during the Accumulation Period. The Insurance Company
guarantees that the mortality risk charge will not increase during the life of
a Contract.     
   
The Insurance Company assumes certain expense risks under the Contracts. The
expense risks arise from the Insurance Company's guarantees in the Contracts
to make Annuity Payments in certain instances in accordance with annuity
tables provided in the Contracts, regardless of whether its estimates of
expenses it expects to incur, over the lengthy period that Annuity payments
may be made will turn out to be correct. Thus, the Insurance Company assumes
the risk that expenses will be higher than estimated.     
   
For assuming the expense risks associated with the Contracts, the Insurance
Company will, each Valuation Day, make a deduction at an annual rate of .15%
of the value of the net assets in each Fund. This charge will apply with
respect to a Participant during the Accumulation Period.     
   
If revenues derived from the Distribution Expense Charge do not cover all true
distribution expenses, any shortfall will be paid out of the general assets of
the Insurance Company and, if revenues from the Mortality and Expense Risk
Charge exceed the actual cost of the Insurance Company's risk undertaking, the
excess will be retained by the Insurance Company and may help cover any such
shortfall.     
 
PORTFOLIO COMPANY EXPENSES
   
The value of the assets in the Separate Account will reflect the value of the
shares of the Portfolio Companies in which such assets are invested, and
therefore will take into account the fees and expenses paid by the Investment
Company, Fidelity Portfolios, Scudder Portfolios, TCI Growth Fund or Calvert
Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio, as the case may be.     
   
Each Fund of the Investment Company receives investment advice from Mutual of
America Capital Management Corporation (the "Adviser"), an indirect wholly-
owned subsidiary of the Insurance Company. The Adviser receives from each such
Fund a fee calculated as a daily charge at the annual rate of .25% of the
value of the net assets in the Money Market Fund; .125% of the value of the
net assets in the Equity Index Fund; .50% of the value of the net assets in
the All America, Bond, Short-Term Bond, Mid-Term Bond and Composite Funds; and
 .85% of the value of the net assets in the Aggressive Equity Fund of the
Investment Company. For 1995, the Adviser paid all of the expenses of the
Investment Company Funds other than advisory fees, brokers' commissions,
transfer taxes and other fees relating to portfolio transactions. The Adviser
voluntarily limits the Investment Company Funds' expenses in this manner. See
"The Funds' Expenses" in the Investment Company prospectus.     
   
The Adviser, with respect to three-quarters of the Active Assets of the All
America Fund, has entered into subadvisory agreements (each a "Subadvisory
Agreement") with three professional advisers: Palley-Needelman Asset
Management, Inc. ("Palley-Needelman"); Oak Associates, Ltd. ("Oak
Associates"),     
 
                                      19
<PAGE>
 
   
and Fred Alger Management, Inc. ("Alger Management"). The Adviser at its own
expense will pay to the Subadvisers an amount calculated as a daily charge at
the following annual rates: Palley-Needelman, .30%; Oak Associates, .30%; and
Alger Management, .45%; of the value of the net assets for which each
Subadviser is providing investment advisory services.     
   
Fidelity VIP Equity-Income Portfolio, Fidelity VIP II Contrafund Portfolio and
Fidelity VIP II Asset Manager Portfolio receive investment advice from
Fidelity Management & Research Company ("FMR"). FMR receives from each
Portfolio a fee, calculated as a daily charge and payable monthly, that is a
sum of two components multiplied by average net assets. The components are a
group fee rate based on the monthly average net assets of all the mutual funds
advised by FMR, which cannot exceed .52% and declines as assets rise, and an
individual fund fee rate. The effective group fee rate for December 1995 was
 .3097%, and the individual fund fee rates for the Equity-Income, Contrafund
and Asset Manager Portfolios are .20%, .30% and .40%, respectively.     
   
Each Scudder Portfolio, Class A Shares, receives investment advice from
Scudder, Stevens & Clark, Inc., and Scudder, Stevens & Clark, Inc. receives
from each such Scudder Portfolio a fee calculated as a daily charge at the
annual rate of .475% of the value of the assets in the Scudder Capital Growth
Portfolio and the Scudder Bond Portfolio and .875% of the value of the assets
in the Scudder International Portfolio. Also, there may be deducted from each
Scudder Portfolio up to an additional .275% of the value of the assets in the
Scudder Capital Growth Portfolio and the Scudder Bond Portfolio, and up to
 .625% of the value of the assets in the Scudder International Portfolio, for
expenses incurred by such Portfolio. Pursuant to a Participation Agreement
between Scudder and the Insurance Company, the Insurance Company will make a
capital contribution to the Scudder Portfolios in the amount of its pro rata
portion, allocated among insurance companies that purchase shares of the
portfolios, of the expenses of the Capital Growth and Bond Portfolios which
exceed .75% of their average net assets, and, for the International Portfolio,
which exceed 1.5% of its average net assets.     
   
The TCI Growth Fund receives investment advice from Investors Research
Corporation, and Investors Research Corporation receives from the TCI Growth
Fund a fee calculated as a daily charge at the annual rate of 1.00% of the
assets of the TCI Growth Fund. Many investment companies pay smaller
management fees than the aforesaid fee paid by the TCI Growth Fund to
Investors Research Corporation. However, TCI has stated in the prospectus for
the TCI Growth Fund which is attached to this Prospectus, that most, if not
all, of such companies also pay, in addition, certain of their own expenses,
while all TCI Growth Fund's expenses except brokerage, taxes, interest, fees
and expenses of non-interested directors (including counsel fees) and
extraordinary expenses are paid by Investors Research Corporation.     
   
Pursuant to the Fund Participation Agreement among the Insurance Company, TCI
and Investors Research Corporation, Investors Research Corporation pays the
Insurance Company for certain administrative savings resulting from that
agreement. Currently, that payment is an amount equal to .20% per annum of the
average amount of the Separate Account's investment in TCI, provided the
aggregate amount of the Separate Account's investment and the investments of
other separate accounts of the Insurance Company in the TCI Growth Fund for
that month exceeds $10 million. The administrative fees assessed against the
Separate Account Fund holding shares of TCI Growth Fund are reduced by the
full amount of such payments to the Insurance Company.     
   
Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio receives investment advice
from Calvert Asset Management Company, Inc., and NCM Capital Management Group,
Inc. is the Sub-Adviser for the equity portion of the Portfolio. Calvert Asset
Management Company, Inc. receives from Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced
Portfolio a monthly base fee, computed on a daily basis at an annual rate of
0.70% (subject to adjustment as described below) of average net assets of the
Portfolio. Calvert Asset Management Company, Inc. pays, at its own expense,
the fee of the Sub-Adviser. Calvert Asset     
 
                                      20
<PAGE>
 
   
Management Company, Inc. and the Sub-Adviser may earn (or have their fees
reduced by) performance fee adjustments based on the extent to which the
Portfolio exceeds or trails the Lipper Balanced Funds Index. After July 1,
1996, the performance adjustment could cause the annual rate to be as high as
 .85% or as low as .55% of average net assets. Pursuant to an agreement between
the Insurance Company and Calvert Securities Corporation, Calvert Securities
Corporation has agreed that it shall cause the annual operating expenses
(including the investment advisory fee but excluding brokerage commissions,
interest, taxes and extraordinary expenses) of the Calvert Responsibly
Invested Balanced Portfolio to not exceed 0.85% of such Portfolio's average
daily net assets until further notice to the Insurance Company.     
   
A complete description of the fees and expenses paid by the Investment Company
Funds, the Fidelity Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios, the TCI Growth Fund
and Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio is found in their
respective prospectuses attached to this Prospectus.     
 
                              THE GROUP CONTRACT
 
GENERAL
   
The Contracts are issued by the Insurance Company to Contractholders as a
funding vehicle for benefits under a Plan. The Contractholder is at all times
the owner of the Contract. Eligibility for participation by any employee of an
employer shall be determined in accordance with the terms of a Plan. The Plan
or the Insurance Company may require Participants to execute agreements and
applications on their prescribed forms.     
 
DEPOSITS OF DEFERRED COMPENSATION
   
Deferred Compensation Amounts are remitted to the Insurance Company.
Participants, pursuant to Salary Reduction Agreements with Contractholders,
elect the Deferred Compensation Amount to be remitted on their behalf by the
Contractholder. Employers may also remit amounts on behalf of Participants as
matching or non-matching Contributions. The Participant's Account Balance is
regarded as an asset of the Contractholder and the Participant as a general
creditor of the Contractholder. However, a Contractholder may also remit to
the Insurance Company on behalf of a Participant in a single sum, an amount
that arises from a transfer from any other eligible state deferred
compensation plan of the same state.     
   
The Deferred Compensation Amount remitted with respect to a Participant under
the contract may not be less than $10 nor greater than any amount permitted
under applicable law.     
   
Acceptance of Initial Deferred Compensation Amounts. If an initial remittance
of Deferred Compensation Amounts is received together with necessary
information, it will be accepted within two business days of receipt. If any
necessary information is not submitted, the Insurance Company will retain the
Deferred Compensation Amounts for up to five business days while attempting to
obtain the information necessary; the Deferred Compensation Amounts will be
accepted within two business days of receipt of the information. If such
necessary information is not received within five business days, however, the
Insurance Company will return the Deferred Compensation Amount at the end of
that period, unless the Contractholder consents to the Insurance Company's
holding the Deferred Compensation Amount until additional information is
provided.     
   
Limitation on Deferrals. The amount that may be deferred by a Participant
under the Plan for the Participant's taxable year (in general, the calendar
year) may not exceed (A) the lesser of (i) $7,500 or (ii) 33 1/3 percent of
the Participant's includible compensation (taxable earnings) for the year; a
Plan may provide, however, that (B) during one or more of the last three years
prior to the year in which a Participant attains normal retirement age he may
defer an amount equal to the lesser of (i) $15,000 or (ii) the sum of the
applicable limitation provided in (A) above for the current taxable year and
the excess of the applicable limitation for each taxable year in which the
Participant was eligible to participate in an eligible deferred compensation
plan over the amounts previously deferred for such years.     
 
                                      21
<PAGE>
 
   
The limitation set forth in (B) may be exercised only once. With respect to
government plans, the years referred to in (B)(ii) are only those years
beginning after December 31, 1978 during which the Participant was employed by
a public employer in the same state which sponsored a plan under Section 457
of the Code in which the Participant was eligible to participate and under
which amounts deferred were subject to the limits described in (A) above. With
respect to eligible non-governmental employers, the years referred to in
(B)(ii) above are only those years beginning on and after January 1, 1987
during which an eligible Participant was employed by the employer sponsoring
the Plan.     
   
The limitations set forth above shall be reduced by any amount excluded from
the Participant's gross income for the applicable taxable year under Sections
403(b), 401(k) or 402(a)(8) of the Code, and shall be further reduced to the
extent required by Section 457 of the Code, and the regulations thereunder,
taking into account deferrals under this and any other eligible deferred
compensation plan of the employer or any other eligible employer.     
 
ALLOCATIONS OF DEFERRED COMPENSATION DEPOSITS
   
Deferred Compensation Amounts remitted under the Contracts are allocated among
the General Account and the sixteen Funds of the Separate Account. Deferred
Compensation Amounts will be allocated on the basis of a request made to the
Insurance Company and currently on file at its home office (see "General
Matters--Contacting the Insurance Company"). A Participant's request for
allocation will specify the percentage, in any whole percentage from 0% to
100%, of each remittance of Deferred Compensation Amounts to be allocated to
each of the Investment Alternatives. The request for allocation of Deferred
Compensation Amounts among the Investment Alternatives may be changed from
time to time, and amounts may be transferred among those alternatives (see
"Transfers Among Investment Alternatives"). A Contractholder may provide that
Contributions not made through salary reduction may in whole or in part be
restricted to the General Account. A Participant should make periodic reviews
of all allocations in light of market conditions, the Participant's retirement
plans, and overall financial planning requirements.     
 
ACCUMULATION UNITS
   
Remittances of Deferred Compensation Amounts under the Contracts which are
allocated to the Separate Account on behalf of a Participant will be credited
to an individual accumulation account maintained for such Participant with
respect to each of the chosen Funds of the Separate Account in the form of
Accumulation Units as of the Valuation Period during which the Deferred
Compensation Amount is received by the Insurance Company. The number of
Accumulation Units in a Fund of the Separate Account credited to the account
of a Participant is determined by dividing the amount allocated to that Fund
of the Separate Account on behalf of such Participant by the Accumulation Unit
value for that Fund of the Separate Account for the Valuation Period during
which the remittance of Deferred Compensation Amounts is received. The value
of the Accumulation Units of each Fund of the Separate Account will vary with
the investment experience of that Fund.     
   
The number of Accumulation Units in a Participant's individual account will
fluctuate in accordance with amounts allocated to or withdrawn from the Funds
of the Separate Account. The net change in Accumulation Units is determined by
adjusting the number of Accumulation Units in the Funds of the Separate
Account as of the end of the previous Valuation Period by adding or deducting
Accumulation Units with respect to Deferred Compensation Amounts remitted to,
or amounts withdrawn from, the respective Funds of the Separate Account during
that Valuation Period. The number of Accumulation Units to be so added or
deducted is the number obtained by dividing the amounts so allocated, or
withdrawn, by the Accumulation Unit value for that Valuation Period.     
 
                                      22
<PAGE>
 
   
The Accumulation Units in each Fund of the Separate Account are valued
separately. The value of an Accumulation Unit in each Fund of the Separate
Account corresponding to a Fund of the Investment Company originally was set
arbitrarily at one dollar. The value of an Accumulation Unit in the Fund of
the Separate Account corresponding to one of the Fidelity Portfolios, Scudder
Portfolios, TCI Growth Fund or Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio
originally was established by deducting expenses of the Separate Account
applicable to that portfolio or fund from the applicable unit value
established by the respective Portfolio Company portfolio or fund as of the
end of the last Valuation Day immediately preceding the day when the first
investment was made by the Separate Account in the Portfolio Company portfolio
or fund. For any Valuation Period, the value of an Accumulation Unit in a Fund
of the Separate Account is the amount obtained by multiplying the value of an
Accumulation Unit in that Fund as of the preceding Valuation Period, by the
Fund's Accumulation Unit Change Factor (described below) for that Valuation
Period. The dollar value of an Accumulation Unit in each Fund of the Separate
Account, therefore, will vary from Valuation Period to Valuation Period,
depending on the investment experience of the Fund.     
   
The Accumulation Unit Change Factor for each Fund of the Separate Account for
any Valuation Period is determined as:     
     
  (a) the ratio of (i) the asset value of that Fund at the end of the current
  Valuation Period, before any amounts are allocated to, or withdrawn from,
  the Fund with respect to that Valuation Period, to (ii) the asset value of
  the Fund at the end of the preceding Valuation Period, after all
  allocations and withdrawals were made for that period, divided by     
     
  (b) 1.000000 plus the component of the annual rate of mortality and expense
  risk, distribution expense and administrative charges (which does not
  include the monthly administrative charge per Participant which is $2.00
  but in no event to exceed 1/12 of 1% of the Account Value in any month)
  against a Fund's assets for the number of days from the end of the
  preceding Valuation Period to the end of the current Valuation Period (see
  "Charges").     
   
The value of the Accumulation Units credited to the account of a Participant
in the Separate Account for any Valuation Period prior to the Annuity
Commencement Date is determined by multiplying the number of Accumulation
Units credited to such Participant in each chosen Fund of the Separate Account
by the Accumulation Unit value for each chosen Fund at the end of the
Valuation Period.     
 
TRANSFERS AMONG INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVES
   
Prior to the Annuity Commencement Date, Participants may elect, subject to the
conditions imposed by the Plan or those described below, to transfer amounts
among Investment Alternatives. Thus, amounts may be transferred among Funds of
the Separate Account, and between the Separate Account and the General Account
(see "General Matters--Contacting the Insurance Company"). A Participant may
express the amount sought to be transferred as a dollar amount, or as a number
of Accumulation Units, or as a percentage of the value of the Participant's
investment in the selected Investment Alternative. Transfers may not be made
after the Annuity Commencement Date. No charges are currently imposed for
transfers, but the Insurance Company reserves the right to impose such charges
in the future.     
   
Any transfers from a Fund of the Separate Account will result in the
cancellation of Accumulation Units in that Fund on the basis of the current
Accumulation Unit value for the Valuation Period during which the request is
received. Transfers to a Fund of the Separate Account from either the General
Account or another Fund of the Separate Account will be credited to that Fund
based on the current Accumulation Unit value for the Valuation Period during
which the transferred amount is received (see "Postponement of Payments").
       
No request for a transfer will be binding on the Insurance Company until it
receives all information necessary to process the request.     
 
                                      23
<PAGE>
 
WITHDRAWALS
   
Pursuant to a Plan, a Participant may withdraw his account balance in the
event of an unforeseen emergency. Otherwise, distributions from the Plan will
be subject to the restrictions discussed in "Benefit Payments." In the event
of an unforeseen emergency, a withdrawal may be made by the Participant in an
amount which does not exceed the lesser of (1) the amount generally needed to
meet the unforeseeable emergency and (2) the Participant's Account Balance.
Unless the Participant makes a specific determination, the amount of the
withdrawal will be made pro rata from the Funds in which the Participant has
Accumulation Units.     
   
Income tax regulations issued before 1989 define "unforeseeable emergency" as
a severe financial hardship arising from a sudden and unexpected illness or an
accident to the Participant or to a dependent, or the loss of the
Participant's property due to casualty or other similar extraordinary and
unforeseeable circumstances arising from the events beyond his control. A
severe financial hardship will not exist if it can be relieved through
reimbursement by insurance, liquidation of other assets of the Participant
which does not cause severe financial hardship or cessation of Deferred
Compensation Amounts under the Plan. The employer shall determine whether a
Participant faces an unforeseeable emergency as defined in the Plan.     
 
DEATH BENEFITS
   
A Plan may provide that a death benefit shall be payable to the Participant's
beneficiary(s). In the case of death prior to the Participant's Annuity
Commencement Date, such death benefit may be payable in a single sum or as an
annuity. Benefit Payments made in the form of an annuity, must be: (i) payable
over a period not to exceed the beneficiary's life expectancy if the
beneficiary is the Eligible Spouse of the Participant; or (ii) payable over a
period not to exceed 15 years if the beneficiary is other than the Eligible
Spouse of the Participant. Otherwise, the Participant's entire interest in the
Plan must be distributed within five years of the date of death. In the case
of death after a Participant's Annuity Commencement Date, the Participant's
beneficiary will be entitled to receive the death benefit (if any) provided by
the form of annuity in effect on the date of the Participant's death.     
 
BENEFIT PAYMENTS
   
Amounts payable under a Plan generally may not be paid or made available to a
Participant, except as discussed above under "Withdrawals," earlier than the
calendar year in which the Participant attains age 70 1/2 or terminates
employment. In addition, a Plan must provide that a Participant's entire
interest must begin to be distributed not later than April 1 of the calendar
year following the year the Participant attains age 70 1/2 (or, in the case of
certain governmental plans, the year the Participant retires) over the life of
a Participant, the joint lives of a Participant and a designated beneficiary
or a period certain, not longer than the life expectancy of the Participant or
joint life expectancies of the Participant and a beneficiary. Benefit Payments
before a Participant's death must be made at such time and in such amounts as
the Income Tax Regulations shall specify (see also "Annuity Commencement Date"
and "Available Forms of Periodic Benefits"). Before 1989, amounts payable
under a Plan could not be paid or made available earlier than termination of
employment, except in the case of an unforeseen emergency.     
   
Generally, a Plan may provide for payment to be made in the form of a single
sum or annuity, as elected by a Participant. A Plan may also provide that a
Participant may elect to defer to a future date payment of benefits, subject
to the requirements discussed in "Benefit Payments" above. An election as to
the form of payment must be made at such time and in such manner as the Plan
shall provide and, any election which defers payment of benefits to a future
date, shall be made before such benefits are otherwise payable and shall be
irrevocable.     
 
                                      24
<PAGE>
 
                                DISCONTINUANCE
   
The Contracts provide that a Contractholder may discontinue a Contract, at its
discretion, as of the first day of a calendar month that is at least 31 days
after notice of such intention to discontinue is received by the Insurance
Company. The Insurance Company may discontinue a Contract, in whole or in
part, if (1) the Contractholder fails to abide by the terms or requirements of
the Contract, or (2) the Insurance Company determines that a modification of
the Contracts is necessary to comply with Federal or state requirements, and
the Contractholder refuses to accept a substantially similar Contract offered
by the Insurance Company that incorporates that modification. Discontinuance
of a Contract by the Insurance Company will be effective as of a date
specified by the Insurance Company, provided that the Insurance Company must
give a Contractholder at least 31 days' advance written notice in which to
cure any remediable defaults.     
   
In addition, the Insurance Company has the right to discontinue a Contract if,
during any Plan Year, no Deferred Compensation Amounts are remitted on behalf
of any of the Participants.     
   
Discontinuance of a Contract will not relieve the Contractholder of its
obligations under the Contract, and all provisions of the Contract will
continue to apply, except that (1) no further Deferred Compensation Amounts
will be made by the Contractholder, and (2) the Contractholder may transfer to
another insurance company or other financial institution all amounts
accumulated under the Contracts and allocated to Participants, former
Participants, and beneficiaries. Such transfer may be made in any manner to
which the Contractholder and the Insurance Company agree in writing. In the
event of a transfer described in clause (2) above, amounts accumulated for the
benefit of a current or former Participant, or beneficiary, who does not
consent to the transfer may, as elected by that person, be left on deposit
with the Insurance Company, or withdrawn in whole or in part (see
"Withdrawals").     
 
                           POSTPONEMENT OF PAYMENTS
   
Payment of any amounts due from the Separate Account in connection with a
withdrawal, death benefit, termination, or transfer of any amount from the
Separate Account to the General Account will occur within seven days, unless:
       
  1. The New York Stock Exchange is closed for other than usual weekends or
  holidays, or trading on that Exchange is restricted as determined by the
  Securities and Exchange Commission (the "Commission"); or     
     
  2. The Commission by order permits postponement for the protection of
  Participants; or     
     
  3. An emergency exists, as determined by the Commission, as a result of
  which disposal of securities is not reasonably practicable or it is not
  reasonably practicable to determine the value of the Separate Account's net
  assets.     
 
                                      25
<PAGE>
 
                    PERIOD AFTER ANNUITY COMMENCEMENT DATE
 
GENERAL
   
At the Annuity Commencement Date, the amount credited to a Participant in the
Separate Account will be transferred to the General Account and, together with
any amount previously credited to the Participant in the General Account, will
be applied to provide a monthly benefit. The amount of each Benefit Payment
will be fixed and guaranteed by the Insurance Company to the Contractholder in
accordance with the table of annuity purchase rates contained in the Contract.
Until paid or otherwise made available to a Participant, Benefit Payments are
subject to the claims of the Contractholders' general creditors.     
   
The level of periodic Benefit Payments made to Contractholders under the
Contract will not be affected by the mortality experience (death rate) of
persons receiving such payments, or of the general population. The Insurance
Company assumes the "mortality risk" by virtue of the annuity purchase rates
incorporated in the Contract. In addition, the Insurance Company guarantees
that it will not increase charges under the Contracts with respect to periodic
Benefit Payments regardless of its actual expenses.     
   
Accordingly, periodic Benefit Payments will be made in a fixed and guaranteed
amount that is in no way dependent upon the investment experience of the
Separate Account. The amount of monthly payments depends only on the form of
benefit chosen, the applicable benefit purchase rates contained in the
Contract and the total amount applied to purchase the benefit.     
   
Once periodic Benefit Payments have commenced with respect to a Participant,
no further Deferred Compensation Amounts may be remitted on behalf of that
Participant. In addition, neither transfers to the Separate Account, nor
withdrawals of any kind, are permitted on behalf of a Participant receiving
periodic Benefit Payments.     
   
A Plan may provide that a Participant may elect to receive the Participant's
Account Balance as of the Annuity Commencement Date in a lump sum in lieu of
receiving periodic Benefit Payments.     
   
The Insurance Company will issue to Contractholders for delivery to each
Participant thereunder an individual certificate setting forth the amount and
terms of payment of the periodic Benefit Payments.     
   
Payment of benefits under the Contracts will be made by the Insurance Company
directly to the Contractholder or, if the Insurance Company agrees, to
Participants.     
 
ANNUITY COMMENCEMENT DATE
   
The periodic Benefit Payments with respect to a Participant begin on the
Annuity Commencement Date. Participants may elect an Annuity Commencement Date
that is the Participant's normal retirement date (as provided for in his
employer's pension plan if he is covered by such plan, or if he is not covered
by such a plan, age 65); early retirement date (the first day of any calendar
month following an early retirement age, if any, as specified in a Plan), or
later retirement date (the first day of a calendar month following the
Participant's normal retirement date provided the Plan permits a Participant
to elect a later retirement date and such election is made before amounts
become payable, but no later than April 1 of the calendar year following the
year the Participant attains age 70 1/2). For governmental plans, the Annuity
Commencement Date may be delayed up to April 1 of the calendar year following
the year the Participant separates from service, if later.     
   
Annuity Commencement Date elections must be made in advance, in writing as
described under "General Matters--Contacting the Insurance Company."     
 
                                      26
<PAGE>
 
AVAILABLE FORMS OF PERIODIC BENEFITS
   
(1) A Participant who has an Eligible Spouse on his Annuity Commencement Date
shall have his benefit paid on the Joint and Survivor Annuity form described
in Paragraph (4)(a) below. However, the Participant may, before such Annuity
Commencement Date, elect in writing (with the right to revoke such election at
any time before his Annuity Commencement Date) to have his benefit paid in one
of the following forms of payment:     
 
    (a) the Life Annuity form described in Paragraph (4)(b) below,
 
    (b) the 10 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form described in
          Paragraph (4)(d) below,
 
    (c) the 15 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form described in
    Paragraph (4)(d) below, or
 
    (d) the Full Cash Refund Annuity form described in Paragraph (4)(e)
    below.
   
(2) A Participant who does not have an Eligible Spouse on his Annuity
Commencement Date shall have his benefit paid on the 10 Years Certain and
Continuous Annuity form described in Paragraph (4)(c) below. However, the
Participant may, before such Annuity Commencement Date, elect in writing (with
the right to revoke such election at any time before such Annuity Commencement
Date) to have his benefit paid on one of the following alternative forms of
payment:     
 
    (a) the Life Annuity form described in Paragraph (4)(b) below,
 
    (b) the 15 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form described in
    Paragraph (4)(d) below, or
 
    (c) the Full Cash Refund Annuity form described in Paragraph (4)(e)
          below.
   
(3) Limits on Payment     
   
The forms available under the Contract are those described in Paragraph (4)
below. Beginning in 1989, if the value of the Participant's benefit would be
less than 66 2/3% of the value of the benefit that would be payable on the
Life Annuity Form, such benefit shall be adjusted so that it shall be equal to
66 2/3% of the value of the Participant's benefit on the Life Annuity Form.
This may impose, in certain instances, substantial limitations on the forms of
benefit payable.     
   
(4) Forms Described     
     
  (a) 66 2/3% Joint and Survivor Life Annuity     
     
  66 2/3% Joint and Survivor Life Annuity provides an adjusted monthly
  benefit payable during the lifetime of the retired Participant and 66 2/3%
  of such adjusted monthly benefit payable after his death to his joint
  annuitant if such joint annuitant survives him, to continue until the death
  of the joint annuitant. If the joint annuitant should die prior to the
  Annuity Commencement Date of the Participant, the election of this Option
  is automatically cancelled, and the Participant shall automatically have
  his benefit paid on the 10 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form
  described in Paragraph 4(c) below unless, prior to the Annuity Commencement
  Date, he elects in writing (with the right to revoke such election at any
  time prior to the Annuity Commencement Date) to have his benefit paid on
  one of the alternative forms of payment.     
     
  (b) Life Annuity     
     
  The Life Annuity form provides for monthly payments continuing to the first
  day of the month in which the Participant's death occurs.     
     
  (c) 10 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity     
     
  The 10 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form provides for monthly
  payments continuing to the first day of the month in which the
  Participant's death occurs or at the end of the certain period of 120
  months, whichever is later. If the Participant dies before the end of the
  certain period, payments in the same amount shall be continued to the end
  of such period to the beneficiary. If the beneficiary dies before the end
  of the certain period, the commuted value of payments not yet made shall be
  made to the payee named by the Participant.     
 
                                      27
<PAGE>
 
     
  (d) 15 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity     
     
  The 15 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form provides for monthly
  payments continuing to the first day of the month in which the
  Participant's death occurs or the end of the certain period of 180 months,
  whichever is later. If the Participant dies before the end of the certain
  period, payment in the same amount shall be continued to the end of such
  period to the beneficiary. If the beneficiary dies before the end of the
  certain period, the commuted value of payments not yet made shall be made
  to the payee named by the Participant.     
     
  (e) Full Cash Refund Annuity     
     
  The Full Cash Refund Annuity form provides for monthly payments to the
  Participant continuing to the first day of the month in which his death
  occurs. Upon his death, the beneficiary shall be entitled to receive, in
  cash, the excess, if any, of the Participant's Account Balance as of his
  Annuity Commencement Date over the aggregate amount of payments made to the
  Participant.     
 
AMOUNT OF PERIODIC BENEFIT PAYMENTS
   
The amount of monthly Benefit Payments under the Contract will be determined
on the basis of the application of the Participant's Account Balance to the
annuity purchase tables contained in the Contracts in accordance with the form
of benefit selected. The Insurance Company guarantees that the rates used to
determine the amount of Benefit Payments will never be less favorable for a
Participant than the guaranteed rate provided in the Contract.     
 
SMALL BENEFIT PAYMENTS
   
If the initial monthly payment under an annuity benefit payable under the
Contract would be less than $20, or if any Participant terminates employment
and is eligible for a benefit determined to be less than $20 a month under the
10 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form (described above), the Insurance
Company shall, in lieu of making the monthly Benefit Payments which would
otherwise be payable to the Participant commencing on the Participant's
Annuity Commencement Date, pay to the Participant on or before the
Participant's Annuity Commencement Date, in a single sum, the value of the
Participant's monthly annuity benefit that would otherwise be payable on the
10 Years Certain and Continuous Annuity form, provided that single sum does
not exceed $3,500.     
 
                                      28
<PAGE>
 
                              THE GENERAL ACCOUNT
   
Deferred Compensation Amounts allocated and transfers made to the Insurance
Company's General Account become part of the general assets of the Insurance
Company, which supports insurance and annuity obligations. Because of
exemptive and exclusionary provisions, interests in the General Account have
not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (the "1933 Act") nor is
the General Account registered as an investment company under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act"). Accordingly, neither the General Account
nor any interests therein are subject generally to the provisions of the 1933
or 1940 Acts, and the Insurance Company has been advised that the staff of the
Commission has not reviewed the disclosures in this Prospectus which relate to
the General Account. Disclosures regarding the fixed portion of the Contracts
and the General Account, however, may be subject to certain generally
applicable provisions of the Federal securities laws relating to the accuracy
and completeness of statements made in prospectuses.     
 
SCOPE OF PROSPECTUS
   
The Contracts provide for accumulation of Deferred Compensation Amounts on a
completely fixed basis, a completely variable basis, or a combination fixed
and variable basis, and for the payment of periodic benefits on a fixed basis
only. This Prospectus, however, is generally intended to serve as a disclosure
document for the variable portion of the Contracts only. For complete details
regarding the General Account, see the Contracts themselves.     
 
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
   
The General Account consists of all of the general assets of the Insurance
Company, other than those in the Separate Account and the other segregated
asset accounts. Amounts are allocated to the General Account at the election
of Participants in the form of remittances made by the Contractholder on their
behalf, or as transfers from the Separate Account. The Insurance Company bears
the full investment risk for all amounts allocated to the General Account
(whereas Participants bear the investment risk for amounts allocated to the
Separate Account). The Insurance Company has sole discretion to invest the
assets of the General Account, subject to applicable law. The Insurance
Company guarantees that it will credit interest to amounts accumulated for
Participants in the General Account at an effective annual rate of at least
3%. The Insurance Company may, at its sole discretion, credit a higher rate of
interest to amounts allocated to the General Account, although the Insurance
Company IS NOT OBLIGATED TO CREDIT INTEREST IN EXCESS OF 3% PER YEAR. Under
Contracts where employers elect to use electronic media, such as a computer
terminal, personal computer or other electronic device located at the
employer's place of business, to transmit and receive to and from the
Insurance Company, relevant and necessary information with respect to the
Contract, subject to the Insurance Company's established rules and
requirements with respect to accessing computer information, the Insurance
Company reserves the right to credit such Contracts with a different rate of
interest in the General Account than Contracts which do not use such
electronic computer processing. Any amount held in the General Account does
not entitle a Participant to share in the investment experience of the General
Account.     
 
TRANSFERS AND WITHDRAWALS
   
A Plan may provide that at any time prior to a Participant's Annuity
Commencement Date, amounts may be transferred from the Funds of the Separate
Account to the General Account, and, except where restricted by the
Contractholder, from the General Account to the Funds of the Separate Account.
Currently, no charge is imposed for such transfers. The Insurance Company
reserves the right, however, to impose a charge on transfers in the future.
    
                                      29
<PAGE>
 
   
In the event of an unforeseen emergency, a partial or complete withdrawal may
be made from the General Account or the Separate Account prior to a
Participant's Annuity Commencement Date (see "Withdrawals"). In the case of
such withdrawals, the Insurance Company will pay the lesser of (a) the amount
specified in the withdrawal request and (b) the amount that, as of the date of
payment, then represents the total amount in the General Account and the
Separate Account credited to the Participant.     
   
Transfers and withdrawals from the General Account may be delayed for up to
six months following the date that the Company receives such requests.     
 
BENEFIT PAYMENTS
   
All Benefit Payments under the Contracts are made in the form of a fixed
annuity from the General Account. The Insurance Company does not credit
discretionary interest in excess of the guaranteed rate of 3% to Benefit
Payments. The Contractholder must rely on the annuity purchase tables provided
in the Contracts to determine the amount of Benefit Payments to be made with
respect to a participant.     
 
                                GENERAL MATTERS
 
CONTACTING THE INSURANCE COMPANY
   
Except as provided in the following paragraph, all notices, requests and
elections required to be given or made under the Contracts must be in writing
and mailed or delivered to the Insurance Company's home office at the
following address:     
 
                   Mutual of America Life Insurance Company
                               Thomas A. Harwood
                  Senior Vice President, Field Administration
                      National Service Support Department
                                
                             320 Park Avenue     
                            
                         New York, New York 10022     
 
or to your appropriate Regional Office. You can check the address for your
Regional Office by calling the following number: 800-468-3785.
 
TRANSFERS AND RE-ALLOCATIONS BY TELEPHONE
   
Requests by Participants for transfers or changes in the formula for
allocation of Deferred Compensation Amounts remitted may be made by telephone
in lieu of the written procedure described above. Requests by telephone,
however, may be made only if a Participant has received a Personal
Identification Number, which the Insurance Company provides automatically, and
agreed to use it in accordance with the applicable rules and requirements.
Thereafter, the Participant may contact the Insurance Company by telephone
(800-468-3785) and request the desired transaction or change. Transfers
requested by telephone will go into effect on the days on which the request is
made if received by 4 PM, Eastern Standard time (or Daylight Savings Time, as
applicable), at the next calculated price. The Insurance Company reserves the
right to suspend or terminate the right to request transfers or reallocations
by telephone at any time. Although failure to follow reasonable procedures may
result in the Insurance Company's liability for any losses due to unauthorized
or fraudulent telephone transfers, it will not be liable for following
instructions communicated by telephone that it reasonably believes to be
genuine. The Insurance Company will employ reasonable procedures to confirm
that instructions communicated by telephone are genuine. Those procedures
shall consist of confirming the Participant's Social Security number, checking
the Personal Identification Number, tape recording all telephone transactions
and providing written confirmation thereof.     
 
                                      30
<PAGE>
 
DESIGNATION OF BENEFICIARY
   
Under the Plans, and subject to applicable laws, a Participant may designate
(with the right to change such designation from time to time) a beneficiary to
receive any payments with respect to a Participant becoming due to a
beneficiary upon a Participant's death. The Participant may change the
beneficiary while the Participant is living. Generally, the Insurance Company
will pay to the Contractholders, as beneficiaries under the contracts, any
payments becoming due because of a Participant's death.     
   
If no designated beneficiary survives the Participant, and unless otherwise
provided by the Plan or directed by a Contractholder, the Insurance Company
will pay any single sum payment or the commuted value of any remaining
periodic payments to the first surviving class of the following classes of
successive preference beneficiaries: (a) the Participant's surviving spouse;
(b) the Participant's surviving children; (c) the Participant's surviving
parents; (d) the Participant's surviving brothers and sisters; and (e) the
executors or administrators of the Participant's estate. Any commuted value
will be determined on the basis of compound interest at a rate, determined by
the Insurance Company, that is consistent with the interest assumption of the
rates used to determine the amount payable under a periodic benefit payment
(see "Amount of Periodic Benefit Payments").     
 
ASSIGNMENT OF CONTRACT
   
No assignment of a Contract, nor transfer of any rights conferred thereunder,
is permitted.     
 
THE INSURANCE COMPANY'S LIABILITY
   
The Insurance Company's liability for the payment of benefits (see "Period
After Annuity Commencement Date"), death benefits and withdrawals (see
"Withdrawals") is limited to the payments provided under the Contracts that
arise from Participants' Account Balances.     
   
Upon exhaustion of all amounts held under a Contract by withdrawals or by
transfers upon discontinuance of the Contract (see "Discontinuance"), that
Contract will terminate and the Insurance Company will be relieved of all
further liability thereunder, except with respect to any periodic benefits
provided on or before the date the Contract was terminated.     
   
The Insurance Company may rely on the reports and other information furnished
by Contractholders or Participants as required under the Contracts, and need
not inquire as to the accuracy or completeness of such reports and information
(see "Information and Determinations").     
 
MODIFICATION OF CONTRACTS
   
No Contract may be modified as to the Insurance Company, nor may any of the
rights or requirements of the Insurance Company be waived, except in writing
and by a duly authorized officer of the Insurance Company.     
   
A Contract may be changed at any time by the Insurance Company by amendment or
replacement upon at least 31 days' written advance notice to the
Contractholder without the consent of any Participant, or any other person who
is, or may become, entitled to benefits under the Contract, provided that such
changes shall not affect the amount or the terms of the periodic benefits
provided thereunder before such change.     
 
EVIDENCE OF SURVIVAL
   
When payment of a periodic benefit is contingent upon the survival of any
person, evidence of that person's survival must be furnished to the Insurance
Company, either by the personal endorsement of the check drawn for payment, or
by other means satisfactory to the Insurance Company.     
 
                                      31
<PAGE>
 
MISSTATEMENT OF INFORMATION
   
If a benefit provided under one of the Contracts was based on information that
has been misstated, the benefit will not be invalidated, but the amount of the
benefit payments or the amount applied to provide the benefit, or both, will
be adjusted to the proper amount as determined on the basis of the corrected
information.     
   
The amount of any underpayments by the Insurance Company due to any
misstatement shall be paid in full with the next payment due with respect to
the Participant under the Contract. The amount of any overpayments by the
Insurance Company due to any misstatement will be deducted to the extent
possible from the payments thereafter falling due with respect to the
Participant. Interest, based on an annual effective rate of 5%, will be
included in the amount of any underpayments or overpayments.     
 
INFORMATION AND DETERMINATIONS
   
Contractholders and Participants, as appropriate, will furnish the Insurance
Company with the facts and information that the Insurance Company may require
for the operation of the Contract including, upon request, the original or
photocopy of any pertinent records held by the Contractholder or Participant.
Any determination that a Contractholder is to make will be made pursuant to
the terms of the Contract and will be reported by the Contractholder to the
Insurance Company.     
 
ALTERNATE PAYMENTS OF BENEFITS
   
The Insurance Company may make payment due to a payee who is physically or
mentally incompetent to receive such payments, or is a minor, to certain other
persons in accordance with the Contracts. Upon making these alternate
payments, the Insurance Company will be discharged from all liability with
respect to payments due to the payee. Payments to a minor will be limited to
$250 a month until either (a) a guardian is appointed or (b) the minor has
attained majority.     
 
PARTICIPATION IN DIVISIBLE SURPLUS
   
The Insurance Company is a mutual life insurance company and, therefore, has
no stockholders. The Contractholders or Participants share in the earnings of
the Insurance Company. No assurance can be given as to the amount of divisible
surplus, if any, that will be available for distribution under the Contracts
in the future. The determination of such surplus is within the sole discretion
of the Insurance Company's Board of Directors. Under usual circumstances
separate accounts receive little benefit from and contribute little to
divisible surplus.     
 
                                      32
<PAGE>
 
                              FEDERAL TAX MATTERS
   
The Insurance Company currently is treated as a nonprofit social welfare
organization under Section 501(c)(4) of the Code, and its pension business is
exempt from federal income taxation. For federal income tax purposes, the
Separate Account is not an entity separate from the Insurance Company, and its
operations are considered part of the Insurance Company. Accordingly, it will
not be taxed separately as a "Regulated Investment Company" under Subchapter M
of the Code. Due to the Insurance Company's current tax status, investment
income and realized capital gains of the Separate Account with respect to its
pension business are not taxable. Section 457 Contracts are part of the
Insurance Company's pension business. However, if the Insurance Company's tax
status should ever change, any federal income tax imposed with respect to the
Separate Account will be reflected in the value of Accumulation Units.     
 
TAXATION OF BENEFIT PAYMENTS
   
The Contracts offered by this Prospectus are intended to be annuity contracts
for purposes of Section 72 of the Code.     
   
Any contributions by the employer (or earnings thereon) are not taxed to a
Participant until distributed or otherwise made available to the Participant
or his beneficiary.     
 
THE CONTRACT
   
The Contract is offered for use with an eligible deferred compensation plan
designed to meet the qualifications of Section 457 of the Code.
Contractholders are responsible for establishment and administration of the
Plan in accordance with the provisions of Section 457 of the Code. In addition
to limitations on amounts a Participant may defer (see "Limitations on
Deferrals") and restrictions on withdrawals (see "Withdrawals"), an eligible
deferred compensation plan must provide that the Account Balances under the
Contract shall remain solely the property of the Contractholder, subject only
to the claims of the Contractholder's general creditors, until made available
to a Participant or a Participant's beneficiary.     
   
In general, a death benefit, consisting of amounts paid to a Participant's
beneficiary, is includible in the Participant's estate for federal estate tax
purposes (see "Obtaining Tax Advice").     
 
WITHHOLDING ON BENEFIT PAYMENTS AND OTHER DISTRIBUTION
   
Federal tax withholding on periodic benefit payments and other distributions
(such as lump sum distributions or partial withdrawals to the extent available
under a Plan) may be required.     
 
OBTAINING TAX ADVICE
   
The description of this Prospectus of the current federal tax status of
amounts accumulated or received under the Contracts is not exhaustive and is
for information purposes only. The description does not purport to cover all
situations involving the purchase of an annuity or the election of an option
under the Contracts. Tax results may vary depending upon individual situations
and special rules may apply in certain cases. State and local taxes may also
pertain. For these reasons, a qualified tax advisor should be consulted for
complete tax information regarding any specific situation.     
 
                                      33
<PAGE>
 
                                 VOTING RIGHTS
   
In accordance with the Insurance Company's view of present applicable law and
so long as the Commission continues to interpret the 1940 Act as requiring
pass-through voting privileges, the Insurance Company will vote the shares of
the Investment Company Funds, the Fidelity Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios,
the TCI Growth Fund and Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio held
in the Separate Account at regular and special meetings of the shareholders of
such funds or portfolios according to instructions received from persons
having the right to instruct the Insurance Company on how to vote the shares
(i.e., the Participants). The Insurance Company will vote shares for which it
has not received instructions in the same proportion as the Insurance Company
votes shares for which the Insurance Company has received instructions, except
for shares owned by the Insurance Company representing "seed" money, which
will be voted in the Insurance Company's discretion. The Insurance Company
exercises discretion with respect to less than 1% of the voting interest in
the Separate Account. If the Investment Company Act of 1940 should be amended,
or if the present interpretation thereof should change, and as a result the
Insurance Company determines that it is permitted to vote the shares of the
Investment Company Funds, the Fidelity Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios, the
TCI Growth Fund and the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio in its
own discretion, it may elect to do so.     
   
The person having the right to give voting instructions to the Insurance
Company is the individual for whom amounts are accumulated in the Separate
Account.     
   
Each person having the right to give voting instructions to the Insurance
Company will receive periodic reports relating to any of the Investment
Company Funds, the Fidelity Portfolios, the Scudder Portfolios, the TCI Growth
Fund and the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio for which he or
she has the right to give voting instructions, including proxy material and a
form with which to give voting instructions.     
 
                            PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
 
MONEY MARKET FUND
   
From time to time, quotations of the "yield" and "effective yield" of the
Separate Account's Money Market Fund may be included in advertisements, sales
literature or shareholder reports. Both yield figures are based on the
historical Money Market Fund performance of the Fund and show the performance
of a hypothetical investment and are not intended to indicate future
performance. The yield of the Money Market Fund refers to the net investment
income generated by the Fund over a specified seven-day period (the ending
date of which will be stated). This income is then annualized. That is, the
amount of income generated by the Fund during that week is assumed to be
generated during each week in such a 52-week period and is shown as a
percentage. The effective yield is expressed similarly but, when annualized,
the income earned by an investment in the Fund is assumed to be reinvested.
The effective yield will be slightly higher than the yield because of the
compounding effect of this assumed reinvestment. Yield and effective yield for
the Money Market Fund will vary based on, among other things, changes in the
market conditions, the level of interest rates and the level of the Money
Market Fund's portfolio expenses.     
 
OTHER FUNDS
   
From time to time, quotations of a Fund's "total return" may be included in
advertisements, sales literature or shareholder reports. Total return figures
are based on the historical performances of the Fund and show the performance
of a hypothetical investment and are not intended to indicate future
performance. The total return of a Fund refers to return assuming an
investment has been held in the Fund for one, five and ten years and for the
life of the Fund (the ending date of which will be stated). The total return
quotations are expressed in terms of average annual compounded rates of return
for all periods quoted and assume that     
 
                                      34
<PAGE>
 
all dividends and capital gains distributions were reinvested. Total return
for a Fund will vary based on, among other things, changes in market
conditions and the level of the Fund's expenses.
   
For a detailed description of the methods used to determine yield and total
return for the Separate Account's Funds, see the Statement of Additional
Information.     
 
                           FUNDING AND OTHER CHANGES
   
The Insurance Company reserves the right, subject to compliance with
applicable law, including approval of Participants if so required, (1) to
create new investment funds of the Separate Account at any time; (2) to
transfer assets determined by the Insurance Company to be associated with the
class of contracts to which the Contracts belong from the Separate Account to
another separate account of the Insurance Company by withdrawing the same
percentage of each investment in the Separate Account with appropriate
adjustments to avoid odd lots and fractions; (3) to create additional separate
investment accounts or combine any two or more accounts including the Separate
Account; (4) to operate the Separate Account as a diversified, open-end
management investment company under the 1940 Act, or in any other form
permitted by law, and to designate an investment advisor in connection
therewith, which may be the Insurance Company, an affiliate of the Insurance
Company or another person; (5) to deregister the Separate Account under the
1940 Act; and (6) to operate the Separate Account under the general
supervision of a committee, any or all the members of which may be interested
persons (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Insurance Company or an affiliate,
or to discharge the committee of one or more of the Separate Accounts.     
 
                       OTHER VARIABLE ANNUITY CONTRACTS
   
In addition to the Contracts described in this Prospectus, the Insurance
Company offers other individual and group variable annuity contracts, some of
which are not described in this Prospectus but which also participate in the
Separate Account.     
 
                                      35
<PAGE>
 
          TABLE OF CONTENTS OF THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
Distribution of the Contracts               Legal Proceedings      
Money Market Yield Calculation              Legal Matters          
Performance Information                     Experts                
Safekeeping of Separate Account Assets      Additional Information 
State Regulation                            Financial Statements    
Periodic Reports
                        


 
          OBTAINING A COPY OF THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
   
To receive a copy of the Statement of Additional Information at no charge, the
Participant may, as an alternative to calling (212) 224-1600, detach the Form
included below and mail it to Mutual of America Life Insurance Company, 320
Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022.     
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
               ORDER FORM FOR STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
To:  Mutual of America Life Insurance Company
   
Please send me a copy of the Statement of Additional Information dated May 1,
1996 for the Section 457 Contract offered by Mutual of America. My name and
address are as follows:     
 
                ------------------------------------------------------------
                Name
 
                ------------------------------------------------------------
                Street Address
 
                ------------------------------------------------------------
                City                                State              Zip
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
 
 
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
 
                      STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
                                    FOR THE
                               457 PLAN CONTRACT
 
                                  OFFERED BY
 
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                                
                             320 PARK AVENUE     
                            
                         NEW YORK NEW YORK 10022     
 
                                ---------------
   
This Statement of Additional Information expands upon subjects discussed in
the current Prospectus for the 457 Plan Contract ("Contract") offered by
Mutual of America Life Insurance Company. You may obtain a copy of the
Prospectus dated May 1, 1996, by calling (212) 224-1600, or writing to Mutual
of America Life Insurance Company, 320 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022.
Terms used in the current Prospectus for the Contracts are incorporated in
this Statement.     
   
THIS STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IS NOT A PROSPECTUS AND SHOULD BE
READ ONLY IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE PROSPECTUS FOR THE CONTRACTS.     
 
Dated: May 1, 1996
                               
                            TABLE OF CONTENTS     
 
<TABLE>   
<CAPTION>
                                                                            PAGE
                                                                            ----
<S>                                                                         <C>
DISTRIBUTION OF THE CONTRACTS..............................................   2
MONEY MARKET YIELD CALCULATION.............................................   2
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION....................................................   2
SAFEKEEPING OF SEPARATE ACCOUNT ASSETS.....................................   5
STATE REGULATION...........................................................   5
PERIODIC REPORTS...........................................................   6
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS..........................................................   6
LEGAL MATTERS..............................................................   6
EXPERTS....................................................................   6
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.....................................................   6
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.......................................................   6
</TABLE>    
<PAGE>
 
                         DISTRIBUTION OF THE CONTRACTS
   
The Insurance Company offers the Contracts for sale on a continuous basis
through certain employees of the Insurance Company. The only compensation paid
for sales of the Contracts is in the form of salary. The Insurance Company is
registered with the Commission as a broker-dealer and is a member of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. All persons engaged in
selling the Contracts are licensed agents of the Insurance Company and are
duly qualified registered representatives.     
 
                        MONEY MARKET YIELD CALCULATION
   
In accordance with regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Insurance Company is required to disclose the current
annualized yield of the Money Market Fund of the Separate Account for a seven-
day period in a manner which does not take into consideration any realized or
unrealized gains on losses or shares of the Money Market Fund of the
Investment Company or on its portfolio securities. This current annualized
yield is computed by determining the net change (exclusive of realized gains
and losses on the sale of securities and unrealized appreciation and
depreciation) in the value of a hypothetical account having a balance of one
unit of the Money Market Fund of the Separate Account at the beginning of such
seven-day period, dividing such net change in account value by the value of
the account at the beginning of the period to determine the base period return
and annualizing this quotient on a 365-day basis. The net change in account
value reflects the deductions for administrative and distribution expenses or
services and the mortality and expense risk charge and income and expenses
accrued during the period. Because of these deductions, the yield for the
Money Market Fund of the Separate Account will be lower than the yield for the
Money Market Fund of the Investment Company.     
   
The Securities and Exchange Commission also permits the Insurance Company to
disclose the effective yield of the Money Market Fund of the Separate Account
for the same seven-day period, determined on a compounded basis. The effective
yield is calculated by compounding the unannualized base period return by
adding one to the base period return, raising the sum to a power equal to 365
divided by seven, and subtracting one from the result.     
   
The yield on amounts held in the Money Market Fund of the Separate Account
normally will fluctuate on a daily basis. Therefore, the disclosed yield for
any given past period is not an indication or representation of future yield
or rates of return. The Money Market Fund of the Separate Account's actual
yield is affected by changes in interest rates on money market securities,
average portfolio maturity of the Money Market Fund of the Investment Company,
the types and quality of portfolio securities held by the Money Market Fund of
the Investment Company, and its operating expenses.     
 
                            PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
 
MONEY MARKET FUND
   
From time to time, quotations of the performance of the Separate Account's
Money Market Fund may be included in advertisements, sales literature or
shareholder reports. These performance figures are calculated in the following
manner:     
   
A. Yield is the net annualized yield based on a specified seven calendar-days
   calculated at simple interest rates. Yield is calculated by determining the
   net change, exclusive of capital changes, in the value of a hypothetical
   preexisting account having a balance of one share at the beginning of the
   period and dividing the difference by the value of the account at the
   beginning of the base period to obtain the base period return. The yield is
   annualized by multiplying the base period return by 365/7. The yield figure
   is stated to the nearest hundredth of one percent.     
   
B. Effective yield is the net annualized yield for a specified seven calendar-
   days assuming a reinvestment of the income or compounding. Effective yield
   is calculated by the same method as yield except the yield figure is
   compounded by adding 1, raising the sum to a power equal to 365 divided by
   7, and subtracting one from the result, according to the following formula:
       
  Effective Yield = [(Base Period Return +1) 365/7]-1.
   
The current yield of the Money Market Fund of the Separate Account for the
seven-day period ended December 26, 1995 was 4.23%.     
   
As described above, yield and effective yield are based on historical earnings
and show the performance of a hypothetical investment and are not intended to
indicate future performance. Yield and effective yield will vary based on
changes in market conditions and the level of expenses.     
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
 
   
In connection with communicating its total return to current or prospective
Participants, the Money Market Fund also may compare these figures to the
performance of other mutual funds tracked by mutual fund rating services or to
other unmanaged indices which may assume reinvestment of dividends but
generally do not reflect deductions for administrative and management costs.
    
BOND FUNDS
   
From time to time, quotations of the yield of the Separate Account's
Investment Company Bond Funds and Scudder Bond Fund may be included in
advertisements, sales literature or shareholder reports. Yield is computed by
annualizing net investment income, as determined by the Commission's formula,
calculated on a per accumulation unit basis, for a recent one month or 30-day
period and dividing that amount by the unit value of the Fund at the end of
the period.     
 
FUNDS OTHER THAN MONEY MARKET
   
From time to time, quotations of a Fund's "total return" may be included in
advertisements, sales literature or shareholder reports. These performance
figures are calculated in the following manner:     
   
A. Average Annual Total Return is the average annual compounded rate of return
   for the periods of one year, five years and ten years, if applicable, all
   ended on the date of a recent calendar quarter. In addition, the total
   return for the life of the Fund is given. Total return quotations reflect
   changes in the price of a Fund's shares and assume that all dividends and
   capital gains distributions during the respective periods were reinvested
   in Fund shares. Total return is calculated by finding the average annual
   compounded rates of return of a hypothetical investment over such periods,
   according to the following formula (total return is then expressed as a
   percentage):     
 
                               T = (ERV/P)To The Power of 1/n - 1
 
Where:
     
 P    =  a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000
 T     = average annual total return
 n     = number of years
 ERV   = ending redeemable value: ERV is the value, at the end of the
         applicable period, of a hypothetical $1,000 investment made at the
         beginning of the applicable period.     
   
B. Cumulative Total Return is the compound rate of return on a hypothetical
   initial investment of $1,000 for a specified period. Cumulative total
   return quotations reflect changes in the price of a Fund's shares and
   assume that all dividends and capital gains distributions during the period
   were reinvested in Fund shares. Cumulative total return is calculated by
   finding the compound rates of return of a hypothetical investment over such
   periods, according to the following formula (cumulative total return is
   then expressed as a percentage):     
 
                                C = (ERV/P) -1.
     
 C   = Cumulative Total Return
 P   = hypothetical initial payment of $1,000
 ERV = ending redeemable value: ERV is the value, at the end of the applicable
       period, of a hypothetical $1,000 investment made at the beginning of the
       applicable period.     
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
 
                                AVERAGE ANNUAL
                           TOTAL RETURN FOR PERIODS
                            
                         ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995     
<TABLE>     
<CAPTION>
              FUND             ONE YEAR  FIVE YEARS  TEN YEARS  LIFE OF THE FUND
              ----             --------  ----------  ---------  ----------------
   Investment Company All
    America..................      34.4%       13.0%      11.0%         13.5%(1)
   <S>                         <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>
   Investment Company Equity
    Index....................      34.5         N/A        N/A         12.5  (2)
   Investment Company Bond...      17.6         8.8        7.0          8.2  (1)
   Investment Company Short-
    Term Bond................       6.1         N/A        N/A          3.1  (2)
   Investment Company Mid-
    Term Bond................      14.5         N/A        N/A          4.9  (2)
   Investment Company Compos-
    ite......................      20.0         9.9        9.0         10.5  (1)
   Investment Company Aggres-
    sive Equity..............      36.0         N/A        N/A         23.8  (3)
   Fidelity VIP Equity-In-
    come.....................      33.0        19.5        N/A         11.8  (4)
   Fidelity VIP II Contra....      37.5         N/A        N/A         37.5  (5)
   Fidelity VIP II Asset Man-
    ager.....................      15.1        11.1        N/A          9.8  (6)
   Scudder Capital Growth....      26.7        14.1       11.7         12.2  (7)
   Scudder Bond..............      16.4         8.1        7.2          7.5  (7)
   Scudder International.....       9.4         8.8        N/A          7.9  (8)
   TCI Growth................      29.3        13.3        N/A         11.3  (9)
   Calvert Responsibly In-
    vested Balanced..........      27.8         9.5        N/A         8.4  (10)
 
                      CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN FOR PERIODS
                            ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<CAPTION>
              FUND             ONE YEAR  FIVE YEARS  TEN YEARS  LIFE OF THE FUND
              ----             --------  ----------  ---------  ----------------
   Investment Company All
    America..................      34.4%       84.1%     185.0%        301.9%(1)
   <S>                         <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>
   Investment Company Equity
    Index....................      34.5         N/A        N/A         40.8  (2)
   Investment Company Bond...      17.6        52.2       97.5        138.2  (1)
   Investment Company Short-
    Term Bond................       6.1         N/A        N/A          9.1  (2)
   Investment Company Mid-
    Term Bond................      14.5         N/A        N/A         15.0  (2)
   Investment Company Compos-
    ite......................      20.0        60.3      136.0        200.6  (1)
   Investment Company Aggres-
    sive Equity..............      36.0         N/A        N/A         42.8  (3)
   Fidelity VIP Equity-In-
    come.....................      33.0       143.3        N/A        180.4  (4)
   Fidelity VIP II Contra....      37.5         N/A        N/A         37.5  (5)
   Fidelity VIP II Asset Man-
    ager.....................      15.1        69.4        N/A         80.2  (6)
   Scudder Capital Growth....      26.7        93.4      202.1        232.1  (7)
   Scudder Bond..............      16.4        47.6       99.9        113.9  (7)
   Scudder International.....       9.4        52.6        N/A         94.0  (8)
   TCI Growth................      29.3        86.8        N/A        138.8  (9)
   Calvert Responsibly In-
    vested Balanced..........      27.8        57.5        N/A       111.5  (10)
</TABLE>    
- -------
 (1) For the period beginning January 1, 1985 (commencement of operations)
 (2) For the period beginning February 5, 1993 (commencement of operations)
 (3) For the period beginning May 2, 1994 (commencement of operations)
 (4) For the period beginning October 9, 1986 (commencement of operations)
   
 (5) For the period beginning January 3, 1995 (commencement of operations)
       
 (6) For the period beginning September 6, 1989 (commencement of operations)
         
 (7) For the period beginning July 16, 1985 (commencement of operations)     
   
 (8) For the period beginning May 1, 1987 (commencement of operations)     
   
 (9) For the period beginning November 20, 1987 (commencement of operations)
         
(10) For the period beginning September 2, 1986 (commencement of operations)
      
The returns for the All America Fund (previously called the "Stock Fund")
prior to May 1, 1994 reflect the results of that Fund prior to a change in its
investment objectives and policies and the addition of subadvisers on that
date. The commencement dates for the Funds reflect the commencement dates for
the underlying fund or portfolio. Separate Account charges have been deducted
for funds or portfolios which commenced operations prior to the commencement
of operations of the corresponding Fund of the Separate Account.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
 
   
The above figures for the Money Market and other Funds, both for average
annual total return and cumulative total return, reflect charges made to the
Separate Account, including a monthly service charge (a $2.00 monthly contract
fee assessed as a cost per $1,000 based on the average account balance for all
individually allocated contracts). The monthly contract fee is deducted
initially from any net assets in the Participant's Account which have been
allocated to the General Account. If no net assets are allocated to such
Account, the monthly contract fee would be deducted from the net assets of the
Participant's Account which have been allocated to one of the Funds of the
Separate Account in the following order: (a) Investment Company Money Market,
(b) Investment Company Short-Term Bond, (c) Investment Company Mid-Term Bond,
(d) Investment Company Bond, (e) Scudder Bond, (f) Investment Company
Composite, (g) Fidelity VIP II Asset Manager, (h) Calvert Responsibly Invested
Balanced, (i) Fidelity VIP Equity-Income, (j) Investment Company All America,
(k) Investment Company Equity Index, (l) Fidelity VIP II Contrafund, (m)
Investment Company Aggressive Equity, (n) Scudder Capital Growth, (o) Scudder
International, and (p) TCI Growth. As such, the allocation of the net assets
of a Participant's Account would determine whether any monthly contract fee
would be charged against a Separate Account Fund.     
   
The actual treatment of the monthly contract fee and its effect on total
return would depend on the Participant's actual allocation. If a Participant
has net assets in the General Account, the monthly contract fee would be
deducted from the General Account, not any Separate Account Fund. Accordingly,
the illustration of such a Participant's net assets held in any of the Funds
of the Separate Account would experience a higher total return than shown
above. If a Participant has no assets allocated to the General Account, but
has net assets allocated to more than one Fund of the Separate Account, the
fee would only be deducted from one of the Funds so that an illustration of
total return figures of the other Funds would be higher than shown above and
the Separate Account Fund from which the fee was deducted would illustrate a
lower total return than shown above. If a Participant has no assets in the
General Account, but has net assets allocated only to one Fund of the Separate
Account, then after deduction of the monthly contract fee, an illustration of
such a total return figure would be lower than that shown above.     
   
Performance figures, when used, are based on historical earnings and are not
guaranteed. They are not necessarily indicative of the future investment
performance of a particular Fund. Total return and yield for a Fund will vary
based on changes in market conditions and the level of the Fund's expenses.
Unit values will fluctuate so shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less
than their original cost.     
   
In connection with communicating its total return to current or prospective
Participants, a Fund also may compare these figures to the performance of
other variable annuity accounts tracked by mutual fund rating services or to
other unmanaged indices which may assume reinvestment of dividends but
generally do not reflect deductions for administrative and management costs.
    
                    SAFEKEEPING OF SEPARATE ACCOUNT ASSETS
   
Title to assets of the Separate Account is held by the Insurance Company.
Records are maintained of all purchases and redemptions of eligible Portfolio
Companies shares held by each of the Funds of the Separate Account.     
 
                               STATE REGULATION
   
The Insurance Company is subject to regulation by the New York State
Superintendent of Insurance ("Superintendent") as well as by the insurance
departments of all the other states and jurisdictions in which it does
business.     
   
The Insurance Company must file with the Superintendent an annual statement on
a form promulgated by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners. It
must also file with New York and other states a separate statement with
respect to any separate accounts that it may maintain, including the Separate
Account. The Insurance Company's books and assets are subject to review and
examination by the Superintendent and the Superintendent's agents at all
times, and a full examination into the affairs of the Insurance Company is
made at least every five years. A full examination of the Insurance Company's
operations may also be conducted periodically by other states.     
   
The laws of New York and of other states in which the Insurance Company is
licensed to transact business provide specifically for regulation and
supervision of the variable annuity activities of life insurance companies.
Included in such regulations are requirements relating to mandatory contract
provisions and approval of contract form. Such state regulation does not
involve any supervision or control over the investment policies of the
Separate Account, or the selection of investments therefor, except for
verification that any such investments are permissible under applicable law.
    
                                       5
<PAGE>
 
Generally, the states in which the Insurance Company does business apply the
laws of New York in determining permissible investments for the Insurance
Company.
 
                               PERIODIC REPORTS
   
Prior to a Participant's Annuity Commencement Date, the Participant will be
provided by the Insurance Company, at least quarterly, with a statement as of
a specified date covering the period since the last statement. The statement
will set forth, for the covered period: (1) the Deferred Compensation deposits
made on behalf of the Participant under 457 Contracts, or Contributions made
for the purchase of an annuity under other Contracts, to the Separate and
General Accounts; the date such Deferred Compensation was deducted from the
Participant's salary or Contribution made and the date it was credited to the
Participant's account; (2) the interest accrued on amounts allocated for the
Participant to the General Account; (3) the number and dollar value of
Accumulation Units credited to the Participant in each Fund of the Separate
Account; and (4) the total amounts of all withdrawals and transfers from each
Account and each Fund. Employers have been informed that payment must be
remitted to the Insurance Company within seven days of the date it has been
withheld from the Participant's pay. The statement also will specify the
Participant's Account Balance available to provide a periodic benefit, cash
return, or death benefit with respect to the Participant. The Insurance
Company will transmit to Participants, at least semi-annually, reports showing
the financial condition of the Separate Account, and a schedule of investments
held in each Fund of the Investment Company.     
 
                               LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
   
The Insurance Company is engaged in litigation of various kinds which in its
judgment is not of material importance in relation to its total assets. There
are no legal proceedings pending to which the Separate Account is a party.
    
                                 LEGAL MATTERS
   
All matters of applicable state law pertaining to the Contracts, including the
Insurance Company's right to issue the Contracts thereunder, have been passed
upon by Patrick A. Burns, Senior Executive Vice President and General Counsel
of the Insurance Company. Legal matters relating to the Federal securities
laws have been passed upon by the law firm of Graham & James LLP, New York,
New York.     
 
                                    EXPERTS
   
The financial statements included in this Statement of Additional Information
have been audited by the Insurance Company's independent public accountants,
Arthur Andersen LLP, as indicated in their reports with respect thereto, and
are included herein in reliance upon the authority of said firm as experts in
giving said reports.     
 
                            ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
   
A registration statement has been filed with the Commission under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, with respect to the Contracts discussed in
this Statement of Additional Information. Not all of the information set forth
in the registration statement, amendments and exhibits thereto has been
included in this Statement of Additional Information or in the current
Prospectus for the Contracts. Statements contained herein concerning the
content of the Contracts and other legal instruments are intended to be
summaries. For a complete statement of the terms of those documents, reference
should be made to the materials filed with the Commission.     
 
                             FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
   
To the extent that Participants under the Contracts are participating in the
investment performance of the Separate Account, the amounts of Participants'
Account Balances and annuity payments are affected primarily by the investment
results of the chosen Fund(s) of the Separate Account.     
   
The financial statements of the Insurance Company that are included in this
Statement of Additional Information should be considered only as bearing on
the ability of the Insurance Company to meet its obligations under the
Contracts. They should not be considered as bearing on the investment
performance of the assets held in the Separate Account.     
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                      STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                          -----------------------------------------------------
                          MONEY MARKET  ALL AMERICA   EQUITY INDEX     BOND
                              FUND          FUND          FUND         FUND
                          ------------  ------------  ------------  -----------
<S>                       <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
Assets:
Investments in Mutual of
 America Investment Cor-
 poration at market
 value
 (Cost:
 Money Market Fund --
  $32,729,141
 All America Fund --
  $174,927,208
 Equity Index Fund --
  $19,412,903
 Bond Fund --
  $33,061,952)
 (Notes 1 and 2)........  $32,319,175   $197,955,305  $ 21,872,873  $33,514,636
Due From (To) Mutual of
 America General Ac-
 count..................     (793,429)      (606,018)    2,362,430   (1,027,915)
                          -----------   ------------  ------------  -----------
Net Assets..............  $31,525,746   $197,349,287   $24,235,303  $32,486,721
                          ===========   ============  ============  ===========
Unit Value at December
 31, 1995 (Note 5)......       $ 1.80         $ 4.52        $ 1.42       $ 2.69
                               ======         ======        ======       ======
Number of Units Out-
 standing at December
 31, 1995
 (Note 5)...............   17,501,751     43,620,409    17,109,334   12,083,433
                          ===========   ============  ============  ===========
<CAPTION>
                                          MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                          -----------------------------------------------------
                                                                    AGGRESSIVE
                           SHORT-TERM     MID-TERM     COMPOSITE      EQUITY
                           BOND FUND     BOND FUND        FUND         FUND
                          ------------  ------------  ------------  -----------
<S>                       <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
Assets:
Investments in Mutual of
 America Investment Cor-
 poration at market
 value
 (Cost:
 Short-Term Bond Fund --
  $1,611,264
 Mid-Term Bond Fund --
  $3,265,857
 Composite Fund --
  $223,087,740
 Aggressive Equity Fund
  -- $24,261,337)
 (Notes 1 and 2)........  $ 1,586,712   $  3,247,382  $239,838,412  $27,058,738
Due From (To) Mutual of
 America General Ac-
 count..................        3,498         52,775      (318,862)   2,828,500
                          -----------   ------------  ------------  -----------
Net Assets..............  $ 1,590,210   $  3,300,157  $239,519,550  $29,887,238
                          ===========   ============  ============  ===========
Unit Value at December
 31, 1995 (Note 5)......       $ 1.10         $ 1.16        $ 3.39       $ 1.43
                               ======         ======        ======       ======
Number of Units Out-
 standing at December
 31, 1995
 (Note 5)...............    1,447,249      2,848,418    70,558,367   20,857,532
                          ===========   ============  ============  ===========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                      STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
                               DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                         SCUDDER                     TCI       CALVERT
                         --------------------------------------- ----------- -----------
                                        CAPITAL                              RESPONSIBLY
                             BOND        GROWTH    INTERNATIONAL   GROWTH     INVESTED
                             FUND         FUND         FUND         FUND        FUND
                         ------------ ------------ ------------- ----------- -----------
<S>                      <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>         <C>
Assets:
Investments in Scudder
 Portfolios, TCI Growth
 Fund and Calvert Re-
 sponsibly Invested
 Portfolio at market
 value
 (Cost:
 Scudder Bond Fund --
   $14,168,514
 Scudder Capital Growth
  Fund -- $132,718,252
 Scudder International
  Fund -- $73,756,615
 TCI Growth Fund --
   $74,940,379
 Calvert Responsibly In-
  vested Portfolio --
   $13,777,796)
 (Notes 1 and 2)........ $ 14,468,821 $160,115,078  $85,361,223  $97,454,582 $15,166,797
Due From (To) Mutual of
 America General Ac-
 count..................    (124,527)    (657,055)      751,619      712,823     591,461
                         ------------ ------------  -----------  ----------- -----------
Net Assets..............  $14,344,294 $159,458,023  $86,112,842  $98,167,405 $15,758,258
                         ============ ============  ===========  =========== ===========
Unit Value at December
 31, 1995 (Note 5)......      $ 11.30      $ 18.64      $ 11.85      $ 12.18      $ 2.01
                              =======      =======      =======      =======      ======
Number of Units Out-
 standing at December
 31, 1995 (Note 5)......    1,268,848    8,556,431    7,268,760    8,061,251   7,849,044
                         ============ ============  ===========  =========== ===========
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        FIDELITY
                                         ---------------------------------------
                                              VIP        VIP II       VIP II
                                         EQUITY-INCOME   CONTRA    ASSET MANAGER
                                             FUND         FUND         FUND
                                         ------------- ----------- -------------
<S>                                      <C>           <C>         <C>
Assets:
Investments in Fidelity Portfolios at
 market value
 (Cost:
 VIP Equity-Income Fund -- $13,385,731
 VIP II Contra Fund -- $24,149,252
 VIP II Asset Manager Fund --
   $2,704,368)
 (Notes 1 and 2).......................   $14,227,760  $24,643,506  $2,843,230
Due From (To) Mutual of America General
 Account...............................      (87,557)      170,013      34,334
                                          -----------  -----------  ----------
Net Assets.............................   $14,140,203  $24,813,519  $2,877,564
                                          ===========  ===========  ==========
Unit Value at December 31, 1995 (Note
 5)....................................       $ 19.43      $ 13.85     $ 15.66
                                              =======      =======     =======
Number of Units Outstanding at December
 31, 1995 (Note 5).....................       727,702    1,792,070     183,755
                                          ===========  ===========  ==========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                            STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                               ------------------------------------------------
                               MONEY MARKET ALL AMERICA EQUITY INDEX    BOND
                                   FUND        FUND         FUND        FUND
                               ------------ ----------- ------------ ----------
<S>                            <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>
Investment Income and Ex-
 penses:
Income (Notes 1 and 4):
 Dividends...................   $2,108,356  $ 6,282,424  $  732,314  $1,987,417
                                ----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Total income.................    2,108,356    6,282,424     732,314   1,987,417
                                ----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Expenses (Note 3):
 Fees........................      403,965    2,014,428     146,132     357,687
 Administrative expenses.....       79,141      103,563      11,167      53,297
                                ----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Total Expenses...............      483,106    2,117,991     157,299     410,984
                                ----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Net Investment Income
 (Loss)......................    1,625,250    4,164,433     575,015   1,576,433
                                ----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Net Realized and Unrealized
 Gain (Loss) On
 Investments (Note 1):
 Net realized gain (loss) on
  investments................      174,996      676,857     162,564     (28,928)
 Net unrealized appreciation
  (depreciation) of invest-
  ments......................     (485,901)  41,443,244   2,678,826   3,085,787
                                ----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Net Realized and Unrealized
 Gain (Loss) on Investments..     (310,905)  42,120,101   2,841,390   3,056,859
                                ----------  -----------  ----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in
 Net Assets Resulting From
 Operations..................   $1,314,345  $46,284,534  $3,416,405  $4,633,292
                                ==========  ===========  ==========  ==========
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                                     -------------------------------------------
                                      SHORT-                          AGGRESSIVE
                                       TERM    MID-TERM    COMPOSITE    EQUITY
                                     BOND FUND BOND FUND     FUND        FUND
                                     --------- ---------  ----------- ----------
<S>                                  <C>       <C>        <C>         <C>
Investment Income and Expenses:
Income (Notes 1 and 4):
 Dividends..........................  $85,871  $188,932   $13,270,110 $1,884,120
                                      -------  --------   ----------- ----------
Total income........................   85,871   188,932    13,270,110  1,884,120
                                      -------  --------   ----------- ----------
Expenses (Note 3):
 Fees...............................   18,202    26,456     2,798,126    182,556
 Administrative expenses............    3,969     4,659       249,136     17,188
                                      -------  --------   ----------- ----------
Total Expenses......................   22,171    31,115     3,047,262    199,744
                                      -------  --------   ----------- ----------
Net Investment Income (Loss)........   63,700   157,817    10,222,848  1,684,376
                                      -------  --------   ----------- ----------
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain
 (Loss) on Investments (Note 1):
 Net realized gain (loss) on invest-
  ments.............................   14,369    (8,004)      799,067    339,162
 Net unrealized appreciation (depre-
  ciation) of investments...........    7,196   129,249    29,855,578  2,317,578
                                      -------  --------   ----------- ----------
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain
 (Loss) on Investments..............   21,565   121,245    30,654,645  2,656,740
                                      -------  --------   ----------- ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net
 Assets Resulting from Operations...  $85,265  $279,062   $40,877,493 $4,341,116
                                      =======  ========   =========== ==========
</TABLE>
 
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                            STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
                          -------------------------------------------------------------
                                        SCUDDER                     TCI       CALVERT
                          ------------------------------------- ----------- -----------
                                        CAPITAL                             RESPONSIBLY
                             BOND       GROWTH    INTERNATIONAL   GROWTH     INVESTED
                             FUND        FUND         FUND         FUND        FUND
                          ----------  ----------- ------------- ----------- -----------
<S>                       <C>         <C>         <C>           <C>         <C>
Investment Income and
 Expenses:
Income (Notes 1 and 4):
 Dividends..............  $  903,101  $ 5,158,070  $  413,372   $    68,431 $1,347,197
                          ----------  -----------  ----------   ----------- ----------
Total income............     903,101    5,158,070     413,372        68,431  1,347,197
                          ----------  -----------  ----------   ----------- ----------
Expenses (Note 3):
 Fees...................     162,985    1,718,435   1,062,767       810,611    151,060
 Administrative ex-
  penses................      34,390      103,893      31,638        26,045     22,590
                          ----------  -----------  ----------   ----------- ----------
Total Expenses..........     197,375    1,822,328   1,094,405       836,656    173,650
                          ----------  -----------  ----------   ----------- ----------
Net Investment Income
 (Loss).................     705,726    3,335,742    (681,033)    (768,225)  1,173,547
                          ----------  -----------  ----------   ----------- ----------
Net Realized and
 Unrealized Gain (Loss)
 on Investments (Note
 1):
 Net realized gain
  (loss) on invest-
  ments.................     (43,337)     601,944   2,996,091     2,629,546     55,268
 Net unrealized appreci-
  ation (depreciation)
  of investments........   1,156,840   28,289,318   5,526,646    16,390,488  1,651,549
                          ----------  -----------  ----------   ----------- ----------
Net Realized and
 Unrealized Gain (Loss)
 on Investments.........   1,113,503   28,891,262   8,522,737    19,020,034  1,706,817
                          ----------  -----------  ----------   ----------- ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 in Net Assets Resulting
 from Operations........  $1,819,229  $32,227,004  $7,841,704   $18,251,809 $2,880,364
                          ==========  ===========  ==========   =========== ==========
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            FOR THE PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                           1995
                                           ------------------------------------
                                                       FIDELITY(A)
                                           ------------------------------------
                                                VIP       VIP II     VIP II
                                           EQUITY-INCOME  CONTRA  ASSET MANAGER
                                               FUND        FUND       FUND
                                           ------------- -------- -------------
<S>                                        <C>           <C>      <C>
Investment Income and Expenses:
Income (Notes 1 and 4):
 Dividends...............................    $ 98,583    $309,298   $    --
                                             --------    --------   --------
Total income.............................      98,583     309,298        --
                                             --------    --------   --------
Expenses (Note 3):
 Fees....................................      41,644      90,935     10,305
 Administrative expenses.................       4,756       6,620      1,343
                                             --------    --------   --------
Total Expenses...........................      46,400      97,555     11,648
                                             --------    --------   --------
Net Investment Income (Loss).............      52,183     211,743    (11,648)
                                             --------    --------   --------
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)
 on Investments (Note 1):
 Net realized gain (loss) on invest-
  ments..................................         167      21,227      9,118
 Net unrealized appreciation (deprecia-
  tion) of investments...................     842,029     494,253    138,862
                                             --------    --------   --------
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)
 on Investments..........................     842,196     515,480    147,980
                                             --------    --------   --------
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Re-
 sulting from Operations.................    $894,379    $727,223   $136,332
                                             ========    ========   ========
</TABLE>
- -------
(a) Commenced operation May 1, 1995
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      10
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                      STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
                        FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                          -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             MONEY MARKET FUND          ALL AMERICA FUND          EQUITY INDEX FUND
                          ------------------------  --------------------------  -----------------------
                             1995         1994          1995          1994         1995         1994
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  ----------
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>          <C>
Increase (Decrease) in
 Net Assets:
From Operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................  $ 1,625,250  $   291,756  $  4,164,433  $ 13,645,961  $   575,015  $   16,086
 Net realized gain
  (loss) on invest-
  ments.................      174,996      (38,466)      676,857      (567,365)     162,564     (59,579)
 Net unrealized appreci-
  ation (depreciation)
  of investments........     (485,901)     759,856    41,443,244   (12,875,656)   2,678,826      36,617
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 in net assets resulting
 from operations........    1,314,345    1,013,146    46,284,534       202,940    3,416,405      (6,876)
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  ----------
From Unit Transactions:
 Contributions..........    6,674,056    6,073,509    20,883,923    19,674,339    4,017,188   1,098,680
 Withdrawals............   (3,900,806)  (2,623,780)  (10,074,230)   (8,268,470)  (2,116,885)   (234,018)
 Net transfers..........   (2,980,451)    (604,009)   10,560,332    (4,505,657)  14,042,110   1,779,248
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 from unit transac-
 tions..................     (207,201)   2,845,720    21,370,025     6,900,212   15,942,413   2,643,910
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 in Net Assets..........    1,107,144    3,858,866    67,654,559     7,103,152   19,358,818   2,637,034
Net Assets:
Beginning of Year.......   30,418,602   26,559,736   129,694,728   122,591,576    4,876,485   2,239,451
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  ----------
End of Year.............  $31,525,746  $30,418,602  $197,349,287  $129,694,728  $24,235,303  $4,876,485
                          ===========  ===========  ============  ============  ===========  ==========
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                          ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         SHORT-TERM               MID-TERM
                                 BOND FUND                BOND FUND               BOND FUND
                          ------------------------  ----------------------  ----------------------
                             1995         1994         1995        1994        1995        1994
                          -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Increase (Decrease) in
 Net Assets:
From Operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................  $ 1,576,433  $ 1,261,184  $   63,700  $   28,571  $  157,817  $   41,132
 Net realized gain
  (loss) on invest-
  ments.................      (28,928)    (302,472)     14,369      (6,494)     (8,004)    (50,900)
 Net unrealized appreci-
  ation (depreciation)
  of investments........    3,085,787   (1,816,698)      7,196     (17,177)    129,249     (58,646)
                          -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 in net assets resulting
 from operations........    4,633,292     (857,986)     85,265       4,900     279,062     (68,414)
                          -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
From Unit Transactions:
 Contributions..........    4,347,174    4,675,807     481,850     270,055     525,221     320,857
 Withdrawals............   (2,307,210)  (2,006,232)    (87,191)    (36,489)   (262,353)    (63,445)
 Net transfers..........    1,651,332   (6,857,983)    (58,307)    159,174   1,301,289    (227,052)
                          -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 from unit transac-
 tions..................    3,691,296   (4,188,408)    336,352     392,740   1,564,157      30,360
                          -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 in Net Assets..........    8,324,588   (5,046,394)    421,617     397,640   1,843,219     (38,054)
Net Assets:
Beginning of Year.......   24,162,133   29,208,527   1,168,593     770,953   1,456,938   1,494,992
                          -----------  -----------  ----------  ----------  ----------  ----------
End of Year.............  $32,486,721  $24,162,133  $1,590,210  $1,168,593  $3,300,157  $1,456,938
                          ===========  ===========  ==========  ==========  ==========  ==========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      11
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                      STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
                       FOR THE YEARS* ENDED DECEMBER 31,
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                            --------------------------------------------------
                                 COMPOSITE FUND         AGGRESSIVE EQUITY FUND
                            --------------------------  ----------------------
                                1995          1994         1995      1994 (a)
                            ------------  ------------  ----------- ----------
<S>                         <C>           <C>           <C>         <C>
Increase (Decrease) in Net
 Assets:
From Operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................... $ 10,222,848  $  8,133,172  $ 1,684,376 $  (22,089)
 Net realized gain (loss)
  on investments...........      799,067      (144,879)     339,162    (17,738)
 Net unrealized apprecia-
  tion (depreciation) of
  investments..............   29,855,578   (17,831,209)   2,317,578    438,279
                            ------------  ------------  ----------- ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in
 net assets resulting from
 operations................   40,877,493    (9,842,916)   4,341,116    398,452
                            ------------  ------------  ----------- ----------
From Unit Transactions:
 Contributions.............   29,572,877    34,731,678    5,686,601    830,201
 Withdrawals...............  (19,258,841)  (15,888,891)      28,794        (91)
 Net transfers.............  (18,173,511)  (12,539,959)  10,226,297  8,375,868
                            ------------  ------------  ----------- ----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 from unit transactions....   (7,859,475)    6,302,828   15,941,692  9,205,978
                            ------------  ------------  ----------- ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in
 Net Assets................   33,018,018    (3,540,088)  20,282,808  9,604,430
Net Assets:
Beginning of Year/Period...  206,501,532   210,041,620    9,604,430         --
                            ------------  ------------  ----------- ----------
End of Year................ $239,519,550  $206,501,532  $29,887,238 $9,604,430
                            ============  ============  =========== ==========
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        FIDELITY
                                          --------------------------------------
                                              VIP
                                            EQUITY-      VIP II       VIP II
                                            INCOME       CONTRA    ASSET MANAGER
                                            FUND(b)      FUND(b)      FUND(b)
                                          -----------  ----------- -------------
                                             1995         1995         1995
                                          -----------  ----------- -------------
<S>                                       <C>          <C>         <C>
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets:
From Operations:
 Net investment income (loss)...........  $    52,183  $   211,743  $  (11,648)
 Net realized gain (loss) on invest-
  ments.................................          167       21,227       9,118
 Net unrealized appreciation (deprecia-
  tion) of investments..................      842,029      494,253     138,862
                                          -----------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in net assets
 resulting from operations..............      894,379      727,223     136,332
                                          -----------  -----------  ----------
From Unit Transactions:
 Contributions..........................    1,349,849    2,617,118     541,615
 Withdrawals............................      (11,412)     107,831         (74)
 Net transfers..........................   11,907,387   21,361,347   2,199,691
                                          -----------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) from unit trans-
 actions................................   13,245,824   24,086,296   2,741,232
                                          -----------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets...   14,140,203   24,813,519   2,877,564
Net Assets:
Beginning of Period.....................          --           --          --
                                          -----------  -----------  ----------
End of Period...........................  $14,140,203  $24,813,519  $2,877,564
                                          ===========  ===========  ==========
</TABLE>
- -------
*  Except for the periods noted.
(a)For the period May 2, 1994, (Commencement of Operations) to December 31,
1994.
(b) For the period May 1, 1995, (Commencement of Operations) to December 31,
    1995.
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      12
<PAGE>
 
                 MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                      STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
                        FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           SCUDDER
                          ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 BOND FUND            CAPITAL GROWTH  FUND        INTERNATIONAL FUND
                          ------------------------  --------------------------  ------------------------
                             1995         1994          1995          1994         1995         1994
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  -----------
<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>          <C>
Increase (Decrease) in
 Net Assets:
From Operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)................  $   705,726  $   836,572  $  3,335,742  $  9,047,262  $  (681,033) $  (699,709)
 Net realized gain
  (loss) on invest-
  ments.................      (43,337)    (105,216)      601,944    (2,311,123)   2,996,091      861,109
 Net unrealized appreci-
  ation (depreciation)
  of investments........    1,156,840   (1,416,683)   28,289,318   (19,723,530)   5,526,646   (2,847,981)
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  -----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 in net assets resulting
 from operations........    1,819,229     (685,327)   32,227,004   (12,987,391)   7,841,704   (2,686,581)
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  -----------
From Unit Transactions:
 Contributions..........    2,443,120    2,733,263    24,829,211    26,710,616   15,269,408   17,970,684
 Withdrawals............   (1,238,764)  (1,070,007)  (11,652,523)   (8,092,050)  (7,516,904)  (4,975,428)
 Net transfers..........        1,342   (2,832,706)   (5,052,941)    5,109,145  (22,431,215)  22,915,041
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  -----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 from unit transac-
 tions..................    1,205,698   (1,169,450)    8,123,747    23,727,711  (14,678,711)  35,910,297
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  -----------
Net Increase (Decrease)
 in Net Assets..........    3,024,927   (1,854,777)   40,350,751    10,740,320   (6,837,007)  33,223,716
Net Assets:
Beginning of Year.......   11,319,367   13,174,144   119,107,272   108,366,952   92,949,849   59,726,133
                          -----------  -----------  ------------  ------------  -----------  -----------
End of Year.............  $14,344,294  $11,319,367  $159,458,023  $119,107,272  $86,112,842  $92,949,849
                          ===========  ===========  ============  ============  ===========  ===========
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                        TCI                    CALVERT
                              ------------------------  -----------------------
                                                             RESPONSIBLY
                                    GROWTH FUND             INVESTED FUND
                              ------------------------  -----------------------
                                 1995         1994         1995         1994
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  ----------
<S>                           <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Increase (Decrease) in Net
 Assets:
From Operations:
 Net investment income
  (loss)....................  $  (768,225) $  (690,450) $ 1,173,547  $  151,210
 Net realized gain (loss) on
  investments...............    2,629,546    1,389,395       55,268      21,357
 Net unrealized appreciation
  (depreciation) of invest-
  ments.....................   16,390,488   (1,785,436)   1,651,549    (668,145)
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in
 net assets resulting from
 operations.................   18,251,809   (1,086,491)   2,880,364    (495,578)
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  ----------
From Unit Transactions:
 Contributions..............   13,560,719   12,706,848    3,096,573   2,861,238
 Withdrawals................   (6,457,226)  (3,670,340)    (829,244)   (602,657)
 Net transfers..............   13,097,419   (5,384,026)   1,233,524    (834,622)
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) from
 unit transactions..........   20,200,912    3,652,482    3,500,853   1,423,959
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  ----------
Net Increase (Decrease) in
 Net Assets.................   38,452,721    2,565,991    6,381,217     928,381
Net Assets:
Beginning of Year...........   59,714,684   57,148,693    9,377,041   8,448,660
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  ----------
End of Year.................  $98,167,405  $59,714,684  $15,758,258  $9,377,041
                              ===========  ===========  ===========  ==========
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      13
<PAGE>
 
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND ORGANIZATION
 
  Separate Account No. 2 of Mutual of America Life Insurance Company ("the
Company") was established in conformity with New York Insurance Law and
commenced operations on June 4, 1984. On October 31, 1986, Separate Account
No. 2 was reorganized into a unit investment trust consisting of four Funds:
the Money Market Fund, the All America Fund, the Bond Fund and the Composite
Fund. These Funds invest in corresponding Funds of Mutual of America
Investment Corporation ("Investment Company"). Prior to May 2, 1994, the All
America Fund was known as the Stock Fund and had different investment
objectives and no sub-advisors.
 
  On January 3, 1989, the following Funds became available to Separate Account
No. 2 as investment options: Scudder Bond, Scudder Capital Growth, Scudder
International and TCI Growth. The Scudder Funds invest in corresponding
Portfolios of Scudder Variable Life Investment Fund ("Scudder"). The TCI Fund
invests in a corresponding Fund of TCI Portfolios Inc. ("TCI"). Effective May
13, 1991, the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio became available
as an investment option. The Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio
(formerly "Calvert Socially Responsible Series") invests in a corresponding
Fund of the Calvert Responsibly Invested Balanced Portfolio of Acacia Capital
Corporation ("Calvert").
 
  On February 5, 1993 the Mutual of America Equity Index, Short-Term Bond and
Mid-Term Bond Funds became available to Separate Account No. 2 as investment
options. On May 2, 1994 the Mutual of America Aggressive Equity Fund became
available as an investment option. These Funds invest in corresponding Funds
of the Investment Company.
 
  On May 1, 1995, Fidelity Investments Equity-Income, Contrafund and Asset
Manager Portfolios became available to Separate Account No. 2 as investment
options. The Fidelity Equity-Income Portfolio invests in a corresponding
Portfolio of the Fidelity Variable Insurance Products Fund and the Contrafund
and Asset Manager Portfolios invest in corresponding Portfolios of the
Fidelity Variable Insurance Products Fund II (collectively "Fidelity").
 
  Separate Account No. 2 was formed by the Company to support the operations
of the Company's group and individual variable accumulation annuity contracts
("Contracts"). The assets of Separate Account No. 2 are the property of the
Company. The portion of Separate Account No. 2's assets applicable to the
Contracts will not be charged with liabilities arising out of any other
business the Company may conduct.
 
  The significant accounting policies of Separate Account No. 2 are as
follows:
 
  Investment Valuation -- Investments are made in shares of the Investment
Company, Scudder, TCI, Calvert and Fidelity and are valued at the reported net
asset values of the respective Funds or Portfolios.
 
  Investment Transactions -- Investment transactions are recorded on the trade
date. Realized gains and losses on sales of investments are determined based
on the average cost of the investment sold.
 
  Federal Income Taxes -- Separate Account No. 2 and its operations are
treated as part of the Company which is exempt from federal income taxes under
Section 501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code.
 
2. INVESTMENTS
 
  The number of shares owned by Separate Account No. 2 and their respective
net asset values per share at December 31, 1995 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            NUMBER OF  NET ASSET
                                                             SHARES      VALUE
                                                           ----------- ---------
       <S>                                                 <C>         <C>
       Investment Company Funds:
        Money Market Fund.................................  27,443,623   $1.18
        All America Fund..................................  93,084,535    2.13
        Equity Index Fund.................................  16,253,779    1.35
        Bond Fund.........................................  23,459,234    1.43
        Short-Term Bond Fund..............................   1,557,128    1.02
        Mid-Term Bond Fund................................   3,246,787    1.00
        Composite Fund.................................... 132,756,347    1.81
        Aggressive Equity Fund............................  20,021,560    1.35
</TABLE>
 
                                      14
<PAGE>
 
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            NUMBER OF  NET ASSET
                                                              SHARES     VALUE
                                                            ---------- ---------
       <S>                                                  <C>        <C>
       Scudder Portfolios:
        Bond Portfolio.....................................  2,017,966  $ 7.17
        Capital Growth Portfolio........................... 10,617,711   15.08
        International Portfolio............................  7,221,762   11.82
       TCI Growth Fund.....................................  8,080,811   12.06
       Calvert Responsibly Invested Portfolio..............  8,905,928    1.70
       Fidelity Portfolios:
        Equity-Income......................................    738,337   19.27
        Contrafund.........................................  1,788,353   13.78
        Asset Manager......................................    180,065   15.79
</TABLE>
 
3. EXPENSES
 
  Administrative Charges -- In connection with its administrative functions,
the Company deducts daily, at an annual rate of .40% (.65% before 8/2/94), an
amount from the value of the net assets of all Funds except the TCI Growth
Fund for which the annual rate is .20% (.45% before 8/2/94).
 
  In addition, a deduction of up to $2.00 may be made at the end of each month
from a participant's account, except that such charge shall not exceed 1/12 of
1% of the balance in such account in any month.
 
  Distribution Expense Charge -- As principal underwriter, the Company
performs all distribution and sales functions and bears all distribution and
sales expenses relative to the Contracts. For providing these services, the
Company deducts daily, at an annual rate of .35%, an amount from the value of
the net assets of each Fund to cover distribution expenses.
 
  Mortality and Expense Risk Charge -- The Company assumes the risk to make
annuity payments in accordance with annuity tables provided in the Contracts
regardless of how long a participant lives and also assumes certain expense
risks associated with such annuity payments. For assuming this risk, the
Company deducts daily, at an annual rate of .50%, an amount from the value of
the net assets of each Fund.
 
4. DIVIDENDS
 
  All dividend distributions are reinvested in additional shares of the
respective Funds or Portfolios at net asset value.
 
  On December 29, 1995 a dividend distribution was declared by the Investment
Company to shareholders of record on December 28, 1995. This dividend was paid
on December 29, 1995. In addition, the Investment Company declared and paid a
dividend distribution from the Money Market Fund on September 15, 1995. The
combined amount of these dividends was as follows:
 
<TABLE>
           <S>                                    <C>
           Money Market Fund..................... $ 2,108,356
           All America Fund......................   6,282,424
           Equity Index Fund.....................     732,314
           Bond Fund.............................   1,987,417
           Short-Term Bond Fund..................      85,871
           Mid-Term Bond Fund....................     188,932
           Composite Fund........................  13,270,110
           Aggressive Equity Fund................   1,884,120
</TABLE>
 
  On January 27, 1995, April 26, 1995, July 27, 1995 and October 27, 1995,
dividends were paid by the Scudder Bond Portfolio. The combined amount of the
dividends was $903,101.
 
  On January 27, 1995, February 24, 1995, April 26, 1995, July 27, 1995 and
October 27, 1995, dividends were paid by the Scudder Capital Growth Portfolio.
The combined amount of the dividends was $5,158,070.
 
  On February 24, 1995, a dividend was paid by the Scudder International
Portfolio. The amount of the dividend was $413,372.
 
  On January 7, 1995, a dividend was paid by the TCI Growth Fund. The amount
of the dividend was $68,431.
 
                                      15
<PAGE>
 
                   MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
  On December 29, 1995, a dividend was paid by the Calvert Responsibly
Invested Portfolio. The amount of the dividend was $1,347,197.
 
  On June 16, 1995, September 15, 1995 and December 29, 1995, dividends were
paid by the Fidelity Equity-Income Portfolio. The combined amount of the
dividends was $98,583.
 
  On December 22, 1995, a dividend was paid by the Fidelity Contrafund
Portfolio. The amount of the dividend was $309,298.
 
5. FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
  Shown below are financial highlights for a Unit outstanding for each of the
previous five years ended December 31.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA MONEY MARKET FUND
                                   ------------------------------------  
                                    1995   1994   1993   1992   1991
                                   ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
<S>                                <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of year.....  $1.72  $1.68  $1.65  $1.62  $1.54
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of year...........  $1.80  $1.72  $1.68  $1.65  $1.62
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of units outstanding,
 end of year...................... 17,502 17,653 15,815 16,545 15,656
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
<CAPTION>
                                     MUTUAL OF AMERICA ALL AMERICA FUND
                                   ------------------------------------  
                                    1995   1994   1993   1992   1991
                                   ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
<S>                                <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of year.....  $3.35  $3.36  $3.03  $2.97  $2.41
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of year...........  $4.52  $3.35  $3.36  $3.03  $2.97
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of units outstanding,
 end of year...................... 43,620 38,669 36,510 32,352 26,173
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
<CAPTION>
                                        MUTUAL OF AMERICA BOND FUND
                                   ----------------------------------
                                    1995   1994   1993   1992   1991
                                   ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
<S>                                <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of year.....  $2.28  $2.39  $2.13  $1.99  $1.73
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of year...........  $2.69  $2.28  $2.39  $2.13  $1.99
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of units outstanding,
 end of year...................... 12,083 10,601 12,244  9,203  6,152
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
<CAPTION>
                                      MUTUAL OF AMERICA COMPOSITE FUND
                                   -----------------------------------
                                    1995   1994   1993   1992   1991
                                   ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
<S>                                <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of year.....  $2.82  $2.95  $2.55  $2.43  $2.08
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of year...........  $3.39  $2.82  $2.95  $2.55  $2.43
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of units outstanding,
 end of year...................... 70,558 73,239 71,215 50,944 43,115
                                   ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           MUTUAL OF AMERICA    MUTUAL OF AMERICA   MUTUAL OF AMERICA  MUTUAL OF AMERICA
                                 EQUITY            SHORT-TERM           MID-TERM           AGGRESSIVE
                               INDEX FUND           BOND FUND           BOND FUND         EQUITY FUND
                          -------------------- ------------------- ------------------- --------------------
                           1995  1994  1993(a) 1995  1994  1993(a) 1995  1994  1993(a)   1995     1994(b)
                          ------ ----- ------- ----- ----- ------- ----- ----- ------- --------- ----------
<S>                       <C>    <C>   <C>     <C>   <C>   <C>     <C>   <C>   <C>     <C>       <C>
Unit value, beginning of
 year/period............  $ 1.05 $1.05  $1.00  $1.03 $1.03  $1.00  $1.01 $1.06  $1.00  $    1.05  $   1.00
                          ====== =====  =====  ===== =====  =====  ===== =====  =====  =========  ========
Unit value, end of
 year/period............  $ 1.42 $1.05  $1.05  $1.10 $1.03  $1.03  $1.16 $1.01  $1.06  $    1.43  $   1.05
                          ====== =====  =====  ===== =====  =====  ===== =====  =====  =========  ========
Thousands of units
 outstanding, end of
 year/period............  17,109 4,644  2,135  1,447 1,132    747  2,848 1,444  1,411     20,858     9,145
                          ====== =====  =====  ===== =====  =====  ===== =====  =====  =========  ========
</TABLE>
- -------
(a) Commenced Operations, February 5, 1993
(b) Commenced Operations, May 2, 1994
 
                                      16
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE ACCOUNT NO. 2
                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            SCUDDER
                          -------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     BOND FUND                    CAPITAL GROWTH FUND
                          -------------------------------- ----------------------------------
                           1995   1994   1993  1992  1991   1995   1994   1993   1992   1991
                          ------ ------ ------ ----- ----- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
<S>                       <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>   <C>   <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>    
Unit value, beginning of
 year...................  $ 9.69 $10.32 $ 9.30 $8.78 $7.54 $14.67 $16.46 $13.80 $13.09 $ 9.48
                          ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Unit value, end of
 year...................  $11.30 $ 9.69 $10.32 $9.30 $8.78 $18.64 $14.67 $16.46 $13.80 $13.09
                          ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
Thousands of units
 outstanding, end
 of year................   1,269  1,169  1,277 1,053   600  8,556  8,121  6,582  3,698  2,138
                          ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ====== ====== ====== ====== ======
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      SCUDDER                              TCI
                                 INTERNATIONAL FUND                   GROWTH FUND
                          -------------------------------- ------------------------------
                           1995   1994   1993  1992  1991   1995  1994  1993  1992  1991
                          ------ ------ ------ ----- ----- ------ ----- ----- ----- -----
<S>                       <C>    <C>    <C>    <C>   <C>   <C>    <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   
Unit value, beginning of
 year...................  $10.80 $11.06 $ 8.13 $8.48 $7.68 $ 9.39 $9.61 $8.81 $9.01 $6.40
                          ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
Unit value, end of
 year...................  $11.85 $10.80 $11.06 $8.13 $8.48 $12.18 $9.39 $9.61 $8.81 $9.01
                          ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
Thousands of units
 outstanding, end
 of year................   7,269  8,610  5,400 2,262 1,849  8,061 6,361 5,946 5,280 3,056
                          ====== ====== ====== ===== ===== ====== ===== ===== ===== =====
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                            CALVERT
                                                 RESPONSIBLY INVESTED FUND(a)
                                                 -----------------------------
                                                 1995  1994  1993  1992  1991
                                                 ----- ----- ----- ----- -----
<S>                                              <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>   <C>
Unit value, beginning of year/period............ $1.57 $1.64 $1.54 $1.44 $1.32
                                                 ===== ===== ===== ===== =====
Unit value, end of year/period.................. $2.01 $1.57 $1.64 $1.54 $1.44
                                                 ===== ===== ===== ===== =====
Thousands of units outstanding, end of
 year/period.................................... 7,849 5,986 5,151 2,742   678
                                                 ===== ===== ===== ===== =====
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                        FIDELITY(b)
                                              --------------------------------
                                                EQUITY-   CONTRA ASSET MANAGER
                                              INCOME FUND  FUND      FUND
                                                 1995      1995      1995
                                              ----------- ------ -------------
<S>                                           <C>         <C>    <C>
Unit value, beginning of period..............   $16.30    $11.43    $14.04
                                                ======    ======    ======
Unit value, end of period....................   $19.43    $13.85    $15.66
                                                ======    ======    ======
Thousands of units outstanding, end of
 period......................................      728     1,792       184
                                                ======    ======    ======
</TABLE>
- -------
(a) Commenced Operations May 13, 1991
(b) Commenced Operations May 1, 1995
 
                                      17
<PAGE>
 
                   REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
 
To Mutual of America Life Insurance Company:
 
  We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities of
Mutual of America Separate Account No. 2 as of December 31, 1995, and the
related statement of operations for the year then ended and the statements of
changes in net assets for the years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994 and the
financial highlights for the periods in the four years ended December 31,
1995. These financial statements and financial highlights are the
responsibility of the Separate Account's management. Our responsibility is to
express an opinion on these financial statements and financial highlights
based on our audits. The financial highlights of Mutual of America Separate
Account No. 2 for the periods in the year ended December 31, 1991, were
audited by other auditors whose report dated February 19, 1992 expressed an
unqualified opinion on those financial highlights.
 
  We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to
obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of
material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit
also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant
estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial
statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis
for our opinion.
 
  In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred
to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of
Mutual of America Separate Account No. 2 as of December 31, 1995, and the
results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net
assets for the years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994 and the financial
highlights for the periods in the four years ended December 31, 1995 in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
 
/s/ Arthur Andersen LLP
New York, New York
February 20, 1996
 
                                      18
<PAGE>
 
                    REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS



To Mutual of America Life Insurance Company:

We have audited the accompanying statements of financial condition of Mutual of
America Life Insurance Company as of December 31, 1995 and 1994, and the related
statements of operations and surplus and cash flows for the years then ended.
These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's management.
Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based
on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in
all material respects, the financial position of Mutual of America Life
Insurance Company as of December 31, 1995 and 1994, and the results of its
operations and its cash flows for the years then ended in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles.



New York, New York
February 20, 1996

                                       19
<PAGE>
 
                 MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                 ----------------------------------------
 
                    STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
                    ---------------------------------
 
                        DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
                        --------------------------
 
 
<TABLE> 
<CAPTION> 
ASSETS:                                          1995             1994
                                           --------------   --------------
<S>                                        <C>              <C> 
 GENERAL ACCOUNT ASSETS:
  Bonds and notes (Notes 2 and 5)          $3,955,508,328   $4,027,388,054
   Common and preferred stocks                 67,209,605       57,953,336
   Cash and short-term investments             84,016,362       32,178,425
   Investment in subsidiaries (Note 9)         73,615,480       71,082,561
   Guaranteed funds transferable (Note 3)     135,810,488      154,989,401
   Mortgage loans                              50,056,580       60,144,482
   Real estate                                323,745,247      260,640,755
   Policy loans                                74,083,384       65,442,488
   Investment income accrued                   65,933,026       73,967,565
   Receivables                                 11,957,198        7,514,186
   Due from affiliates                                  -        6,201,329
   Other assets                                16,734,867       12,887,323
                                           --------------   --------------
 
    Total general account assets            4,858,670,565    4,830,389,905
 
SEPARATE ACCOUNT ASSETS                     2,123,670,361    1,625,383,655
                                           --------------   --------------
 
TOTAL ASSETS                               $6,982,340,926   $6,455,773,560
                                           ==============   ==============
 
LIABILITIES AND SURPLUS:
 GENERAL ACCOUNT LIABILITIES:
   Insurance and annuity reserves          $4,056,957,632   $3,988,030,615
   Other contract liabilities and               
    reserves                                    1,373,666        1,856,480
   Note payable (Note 5)                      136,993,262      136,993,262
   Interest maintenance reserve               137,195,073      244,579,848
   Due to affiliates                           10,940,556                -
   Other liabilities                           39,171,993       34,132,131
                                           --------------   --------------
 
    Total general account liabilities       4,382,632,182    4,405,592,336
 
 SEPARATE ACCOUNT RESERVES AND OTHER        
  LIABILITIES                               2,123,670,361    1,615,365,728
                                           --------------   --------------
    Total liabilities                       6,506,302,543    6,020,958,064
                                           --------------   --------------
 
ASSET VALUATION RESERVE                        78,549,533       71,367,533
                                           --------------   --------------
 
SURPLUS:
   Assigned surplus                             1,150,000        1,150,000
   Unassigned surplus                         396,338,850      362,297,963
                                           --------------   --------------
 
    Total surplus                             397,488,850      363,447,963
                                           --------------   --------------
 
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND SURPLUS              $6,982,340,926   $6,455,773,560
                                           ==============   ==============
</TABLE>
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.

                                       20
<PAGE>
 
                 MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                 ----------------------------------------
 
                   STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS AND SURPLUS
                   ------------------------------------
 
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
              ----------------------------------------------
 
 
<TABLE> 
<CAPTION> 
 
                                                1995             1994
                                          --------------   -------------- 
<S>                                       <C>              <C> 
INCOME:
 Premiums, annuity considerations and     
  deposits                                $  628,120,058   $  628,873,707
  Net investment income (Notes 2 and 3)      418,460,126      386,148,078
  Other income                                 1,107,228        1,070,651
                                          --------------   --------------
   Total income                            1,047,687,412    1,016,092,436
                                          --------------   --------------
 
DEDUCTIONS:
  Increase in insurance and annuity          
   reserves (Note 3)                         147,491,075      161,371,093
  Annuity and surrender benefits             663,261,767      593,701,138
  Net transfers to separate accounts          92,524,347      117,196,221
  Operating expenses                         103,437,206       93,243,766
                                          --------------   --------------
   Total deductions                        1,006,714,395      965,512,218
                                          --------------   --------------
 
   Net gain from operations                   40,973,017       50,580,218
 
FEDERAL INCOME TAX BENEFIT                        22,814           32,513
 
NET REALIZED CAPITAL GAINS (LOSSES)           (1,862,749)         594,478
                                          --------------   --------------
   Net income                                 39,133,082       51,207,209
 
SURPLUS TRANSACTIONS:
  Change in asset valuation reserve           
   (Note 1)                                   (7,182,000)       2,421,696
  Net unrealized capital gains (losses)          979,961       (5,306,798)
  Change in non-admitted assets                  244,179       (5,483,172)
  Change in liability for reserve                      
   strengthening (Note 1)                              -      (17,259,176)
  Other, net                                     865,665         (318,014)
                                          --------------   --------------
   Net change in surplus                      34,040,887       25,261,745
 
SURPLUS, AT BEGINNING OF YEAR                363,447,963      338,186,218
                                          --------------   --------------
 
SURPLUS, AT END OF YEAR                   $  397,488,850   $  363,447,963
                                          ==============   ==============
</TABLE>
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.

                                       21
<PAGE>
 
                MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                ----------------------------------------
 
                        STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                        ------------------------
 
             FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
             ----------------------------------------------

<TABLE> 
<CAPTION> 
                                               1995            1994
                                          --------------  --------------
<S>                                       <C>             <C> 
CASH PROVIDED:
 Premium and annuity funds received       $  628,120,058  $  628,873,707
  Net investment income received             330,574,057     313,964,796
  Other, net                                   1,107,228       1,070,651
                                          --------------  --------------
    Total receipts                           959,801,343     943,909,154
                                          --------------  --------------
 
  Benefits paid                              663,744,583     592,763,369
  Insurance and operating expenses paid      100,780,453     100,452,433
  Net transfers to separate accounts          94,331,406     118,133,166
                                          --------------  --------------
    Total payments                           858,856,442     811,348,968
                                          --------------  --------------
 
    Net cash from operations                 100,944,901     132,560,186
 
  Proceeds from long-term investments
   sold, matured or repaid                 2,387,058,255     977,771,330
  Other, net                                  54,252,003      38,170,912
                                          --------------  --------------
 
    Total cash provided                    2,542,255,159   1,148,502,428
                                          --------------  --------------
 
CASH APPLIED:
  Cost of long-term investments acquired   2,469,388,558   1,170,968,156
  Other, net                                  21,028,664      44,362,009
                                          --------------  --------------
 
    Total cash applied                     2,490,417,222   1,215,330,165
                                          --------------  --------------
 
    Net change in cash and short-term
     investments                              51,837,937     (66,827,737)
 
CASH AND SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS:
  Beginning of year                           32,178,425      99,006,162
                                          --------------  --------------
  End of year                             $   84,016,362  $   32,178,425
                                          ==============  ==============
</TABLE>
                See accompanying notes to financial statements.
                                        

                                       22
<PAGE>
 
                    MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                    ----------------------------------------

                         NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         -----------------------------

                           DECEMBER 31, 1995 AND 1994
                           --------------------------



1. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
   ------------------------------------------

Basis of Presentation
- ---------------------

The financial statements are prepared in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles which include statutory accounting practices prescribed or
permitted by state regulatory authorities.  Such statutory accounting practices
are considered to be generally accepted accounting principles ("GAAP") for
mutual life insurance companies.  The ability of these insurance entities to
fulfill its obligations to contract holders and policyholders is of primary
concern to insurance regulatory authorities.  As such, the financial statements
are oriented to the insuring public.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued an interpretation
declaring that financial statements of mutual life insurance companies, which
are prepared on the basis of statutory accounting principles, will no longer be
considered to be in conformity with GAAP.  This interpretation applies to
financial statements issued for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 1995.
Further, this interpretation requires that mutual life insurers whose financial
statements purport to be in conformity with GAAP follow all applicable guidance
from which they are not specifically exempt.  In addition, certain accounting
principles for mutual life insurance companies, which will ultimately be
required to be in compliance with GAAP, have been determined by the FASB and the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.  The Company has not yet
quantified the financial impact of this interpretation.

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles requires management to make estimates and assumptions that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of
contingent liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported
amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period.  Actual results
could differ from these estimates.

Mutual of America Life Insurance Company (the "Company") has also issued
financial statements on a consolidated basis with its wholly owned subsidiaries.
The issuance of such consolidated financial statements was approved by the State
of New York Insurance Department.  Accounting policies applied in the
preparation and presentation of the financial statements follow.

Nature of Operations
- --------------------

The Company provides retirement and employee benefit plans in the small to
medium-size case area, principally to employees in the not-for-profit social
health and welfare field.  The Company is licensed in all fifty states and the
District of Columbia.  Operations are conducted in all states through both a
network of regional field offices and the use of direct mail.

Disclosure about Fair Value of Financial Instruments
- ----------------------------------------------------

Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 107 ("SFAS 107") requires all
entities to disclose the fair value, where practicable, of its financial
instruments.  SFAS 107 does not require disclosure of certain financial
instruments such as insurance contracts other than financial guarantees and
investment contracts.  Fair value estimates, methods and significant assumptions
are disclosed in each of the relevant footnotes which follow.

                                       23
<PAGE>
 
Asset Valuations
- ----------------

Investment valuations are prescribed by the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners ("NAIC").  Bonds qualifying for amortization are stated at
amortized cost; short-term investments in good standing are stated at cost.
Fair value for these securities (approximately $4.2 billion in 1995 and $3.7
billion in 1994) is determined by reference to market prices quoted by the NAIC.
If quoted market prices are not available, fair value is determined using quoted
prices for similar securities.  All other bonds and short-term notes are stated
at market value which approximates fair value.  Common stocks and preferred
stocks in good standing are stated at market value, which approximates fair
value.  Market value is determined by reference to valuations quoted by the
NAIC.  Unrealized gains and losses are applied directly to unassigned surplus.

Mortgage loans are carried at amortized indebtedness.  Fair value for these
loans (approximately $57.1 million in 1995 and $63.6 million in 1994) is
determined by discounting the expected future cash flows using the current rate
at which similar loans would be made to borrowers with similar credit ratings
and remaining maturities.  Impairments of individual assets that are considered
other than temporary are recognized when incurred.  During 1995, the Company
recorded impairments of $3.8 million as a reduction of unassigned surplus.

Real estate investments are carried at the lower of cost, including capital
improvements, net of accumulated depreciation, or market and are depreciated on
a straight-line basis over 39 years.  Tenant improvements on real estate
investments are depreciated over the shorter of the lease term or the estimated
life of the improvement.  Company-occupied real estate is carried at cost, net
of accumulated depreciation.

Policy loans are stated at the unpaid balance of the loan.  The majority of such
loans are issued with variable interest rates which are periodically adjusted
based upon changes in the rates credited to these policies, and therefore are
considered to be stated at fair value.

Certain other assets, such as furniture and fixtures and prepaid expenses, are
excluded from the statements of financial condition ("non-admitted assets").
Such assets totaled $40.6 million and $40.8 million at December 31, 1995 and
1994, respectively.

Interest Maintenance and Asset Valuation Reserves
- -------------------------------------------------

Realized gains and losses, net of applicable taxes, arising from changes in
interest rates are accumulated in the Interest Maintenance Reserve ("IMR") and
are amortized into investment income over the estimated remaining life of the
investment sold.  All other realized gains and losses are reported in the
statements of operations and surplus.

An Asset Valuation Reserve ("AVR"), applying to the specific risk
characteristics of all invested asset categories excluding cash, policy loans
and investment income accrued has been established based on a statutory formula.
Realized and unrealized gains and losses arising from changes in the
creditworthiness of the borrower are included in the appropriate subcomponent of
the AVR.   Changes in the AVR are applied directly to unassigned surplus.

Guaranteed Funds Transferable
- -----------------------------

Guaranteed funds transferable consist of funds held by a former reinsurer and
are stated at the total principal amount of future guaranteed transfers to the
Company.  Fair value of this fund (approximately $112.3 million in 1995 and
$120.2 million in 1994) is determined by discounting future guaranteed principal
and interest transfers at a market rate of return.

                                       24
<PAGE>
 
Subsidiary Operations
- ---------------------

Investments in subsidiaries are stated at equity in net assets.  Changes in net
assets, excluding additional amounts invested, are included in unrealized
capital gains or losses.

Separate Account Operations
- ---------------------------

Certain annuity considerations may be invested at the participant's discretion
in separate accounts; either a multifund account, which is managed by Mutual of
America Capital Management Corporation, or certain other funds which are managed
by outside investment advisors.  All of the funds' investment experience is
allocated to participants.  Investments held in the separate accounts are stated
at market value, which is equal to fair value.  Participants' corresponding
equity in the separate accounts is reported as liabilities in the accompanying
statements.  Operating results of the separate accounts are combined with the
Company's other business in the accompanying statements.  Net operating gains,
including net realized and unrealized capital gains in the separate accounts are
offset by increases to reserve liabilities in the respective separate accounts.

Insurance and Annuity Reserves
- ------------------------------

Reserves for annuity contracts are computed on the net single premium method and
represent the estimated present value of future retirement benefits.  These
reserves are based on mortality and interest rate assumptions (ranging primarily
from 3.5% to 9.25%) which meet statutory requirements.  Reserves for contractual
funds not yet used for the purchase of annuities are accumulated at various
interest rates which, during 1995 and 1994, ranged from 4.25% to 6.25% and 4.5%
to 6.25%, respectively, and are deemed sufficient to provide for contractual
surrender values of these funds.  Reserves for life and disability insurance are
based on mortality, morbidity and interest rate assumptions which meet statutory
requirements.

Contractual funds not yet used to purchase retirement annuities and other
deposit liabilities are stated at their surrender value, which approximates the
fair value ($5.5 billion and $4.8 billion) at December 31, 1995 and 1994,
respectively.  The fair value of annuity contracts (approximately $.8 billion
and $.7 billion at December 31, 1995 and 1994, respectively) was determined by
discounting expected future retirement benefits using current mortality tables
and interest rates based on the duration of the expected future benefits. A
weighted average rate of 6.21% and 8.35% was used at December 31,1995 and 1994,
respectively.

In 1994, the Company changed the interest rates used to value certain annuity
and deposit type contracts issued prior to January 1, 1994.  The effect of such
changes was to increase policyholder liabilities above the minimum statutory
requirements and to reduce surplus by $17.3 million at December 31, 1994.

Premiums, Annuity Considerations,
Investment Income and Expenses
- ---------------------------------

Insurance premiums and annuity considerations derived from defined contribution
plans are recognized as income when due.  Voluntary savings-type and defined
benefit considerations and other deposits are recognized as income when
received.

Investment income is reported as earned and is presented net of related
investment expenses.  Operating expenses, including acquisition costs for new
business and income taxes, are charged to operations as incurred.

                                       25
<PAGE>
 
2. DEBT SECURITIES HELD AS ASSETS
   ------------------------------

The statement values and estimated market values of investments in debt
securities at December 31, 1995 are shown below.  Excluding U.S. Government and
government agency investments, the Company is not exposed to any significant
concentration of credit risk.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                   GROSS          GROSS         ESTIMATED 
                                   STATEMENT     UNREALIZED     UNREALIZED        MARKET  
            CATEGORY                VALUE          GAINS          LOSSES          VALUE    
- ----------------------------      ----------     ----------     ----------      ----------
                                                    (000'S OMITTED)              
<S>                               <C>            <C>            <C>            <C> 
U.S. Treasury securities                                                    
 and obligations of U.S.                                                    
 Government corporations                                                    
 and agencies                     $1,543,209      $ 62,532       $   234        $1,605,507 
                                                                            
Debt securities issued by                                                   
 foreign governments                 139,883         7,149         1,509           145,523
Corporate securities               2,334,050       129,934        13,461         2,450,523
Other debt securities                 29,328           972             -            30,300
                                  ----------      --------       -------        ----------
            Total                 $4,046,470      $200,587       $15,204        $4,231,853
                                  ==========      ========       =======        ==========
</TABLE>

Short-term securities with a statement value and estimated market value of $91.0
million at December 31, 1995 are included in the above table.  As of December
31, 1995, the Company has $2.8 million (par value $2.9 million) of its long-term
debt securities on deposit with various state regulatory agencies.

The statement values and estimated market values of investments in debt
securities at December 31, 1995, are shown below.  Debt securities are stated at
contractual maturity with the exception of mortgage-backed securities which are
stated at expected maturity.  Expected maturities may differ from contractual
maturities because borrowers may have the right to prepay obligations with or
without prepayment penalties.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       ESTIMATED 
                                                STATEMENT                MARKET  
                                                  VALUE                  VALUE    
                                               ----------              ----------
                                                        (000'S OMITTED)
<S>                                            <C>                     <C>  
Due in one year or less                        $  159,276              $  158,865
Due after one year through five years             750,064                 765,401
Due after five years through ten years          1,449,822               1,504,344
Due after ten years                             1,687,308               1,803,243
                                               ----------              ----------
          Total                                $4,046,470              $4,231,853
                                               ==========              ==========
</TABLE>

Proceeds from the sale of investment securities during 1995 were $2.3 billion.
Gross gains of $18.1 million and gross losses of $105.6 million were realized on
these sales of which $86.9 million of losses were accumulated in the IMR.  Such
amounts will be amortized into net investment income over the estimated
remaining life of the investment sold.  During 1995, approximately $20.4 million
was amortized and included in net investment income.

                                       26
<PAGE>
 
The statement values and estimated market values of investments in debt
securities at December 31, 1994 are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            GROSS       GROSS      ESTIMATED
                              STATEMENT   UNREALIZED  UNREALIZED    MARKET
   CATEGORY                     VALUE       GAINS       LOSSES       VALUE
- ------------------------      ---------   ----------  ----------   ----------
<S>                          <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>
                                             (000'S OMITTED)
U.S. Treasury securities
 and obligations of U.S.      
 Government corporations
 and agencies                 $1,677,127      $  543    $138,792   $1,538,877
Debt securities issued by
 foreign governments             163,225       2,835      18,860      147,200
Corporate securities           2,203,812       3,539     224,549    1,982,802
Other debt securities             18,452           -       2,853       15,599
                              ----------      ------    --------   ----------
            Total             $4,062,616      $6,917    $385,054   $3,684,478
                              ==========      ======    ========   ==========
</TABLE>

Short-term securities with a statement value and estimated market value of $35.2
million at December 31, 1994 are included in the above table.  As of December
31, 1994, the Company had $2.9 million (par value $2.9 million) of its long-term
debt securities portfolio on deposit with various state regulatory agencies.

Proceeds from the sale of investment securities during 1994 were $773.6 million.
Gross gains of $10.4 million and gross losses of $7.4 million were realized on
those sales of which $2.4 million of gains was accumulated in the IMR.  Such
amounts will be amortized into net investment income over the estimated
remaining life of the investment sold.  During 1994, approximately $30.2 million
was amortized and included in net investment income.

3. REINSURANCE AND
   RELATED TRANSACTIONS
   --------------------

In 1980, the Company terminated a reinsurance arrangement and assumed direct
ownership of funds held by the reinsurer and direct liability for the
contractual obligations of the reinsurer.  Such amounts are reported as
guaranteed funds transferable and as insurance and annuity reserves in the
statements of financial condition.

The guaranteed funds are transferable to the Company over time and are stated at
the total principal amount of future guaranteed transfers to the Company as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            1995        1994
                                          -------     -------
                                            (000'S OMITTED)
<S>                                       <C>        <C>
             Certain sums, at 6%
              guaranteed interest, 
              transferable through 1995    $   -      $  6,755
             Remaining sums, at 3-1/8%
              guaranteed interest, 
              transferable through 2030     135,810    148,234
                                           --------   --------
                    Total                  $135,810   $154,989
                                           ========   ========
</TABLE>

The guaranteed interest and other allocated investment earnings on the funds
held by the reinsurer, amounting to $13.1 million in 1995 and $16.6 million in
1994, are included in net investment income.  Such amounts include participating
dividends from a contingency fund held by the reinsurer (but not recorded as an
asset of the Company) of $4.0 million in 1995 and $4.2 million in 1994.

The Company has entered into a bulk coinsurance agreement with The American Life
Insurance Company of New York, a wholly owned stock life insurance subsidiary,
covering primarily its nonpension insurance 

                                       27
<PAGE>
 
business (group insurance coverage and certain annuity business) deemed to be
taxable. As of December 31, 1995 and 1994, total reserve liabilities reinsured
under this agreement were as follows: life and annuities of $768.0 million and
$682.1 million, funding agreements of $63.3 million and $68.0 million and other
reserves of $10.1 million and $3.8 million, respectively. As consideration for
the reserves ceded, the Company ceded premiums and annuity considerations of
$102.9 million and $64.2 million in 1995 and 1994, respectively.

4. REAL ESTATE
   -----------

In October 1992, the Company purchased an office building for its new corporate
headquarters.  The purchase price of the building was fully financed.  During
the reconstruction period, interest costs on the debt incurred to acquire the
building were deferred and capitalized as a construction cost as permitted by
the State of New York Insurance Department.  During 1995 and 1994, interest
costs of $6.6 million and $9.3 million, respectively, were capitalized.  During
1995, the Company occupied a portion of its new corporate headquarters and began
depreciating the occupied portion of the property.  Depreciation expense for
1995 totaled approximately $1.4 million.

5. NOTE PAYABLE
   ------------

In connection with the acquisition of its new home office, the Company obtained
a $135.0 million, seven-year, 6.91% fixed rate secured term note.  Fair value of
the note was approximately $137.0 million and $136.5 million at December 31,
1995 and 1994, respectively.  The note matures and is payable in full on October
15, 1999 and is not redeemable prior to that date. Interest on the note is
payable semiannually in April and October.  The terms of the note require that
the Company pledge collateral, to be maintained in a trust account with the
lender, consisting of securities issued by the United States Government or its
agencies.  The aggregate book and market values of the collateral must be
maintained at a level greater than or equal to 100% and 110%, respectively, of
the outstanding balance of the note.  At December 31, securities with a book and
market value of approximately $164.8 million and $170.2 million in 1995 and
$152.6 million and $132.6 million in 1994, respectively, were pledged as
collateral.

6. PENSION PLAN AND
   POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS
   -----------------------

The Company has a qualified, noncontributory defined benefit pension plan
covering all employees of the Company and its subsidiaries.  Benefits are
generally based on years of service and final average salary.  The Company's
funding policy is to contribute annually, at a minimum, the amount necessary to
satisfy the funding requirements under the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 ("ERISA").  The accounting for such pension plan is in accordance
with the provisions of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 87,
"Employer's Accounting for Pensions."  Pension expense for 1995 and 1994 was
$3.5 million and $2.9 million, respectively, of which $.8 million and $.6
million in 1995 and 1994, respectively, was allocated to the Company's wholly
owned subsidiaries.  The components of net pension expense are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                  1995        1994
                                                --------    --------
                                                  (000'S OMITTED)
<S>                                             <C>         <C>  
Service cost                                    $  2,467    $  2,531
Interest cost on projected benefit                 
 obligation                                        2,967       3,077 
Return on plan assets                             (6,444)        468
Asset gain (loss) deferred                         3,803      (3,420)
Amortization of initial net asset                   (211)       (211)
Amortization of unrecognized loss                    916         367
Amortization of prior service cost                     -         122
                                                --------    --------
  Net pension expense                           $  3,498    $  2,934
                                                ========    ========
</TABLE> 

                                       28
<PAGE>
 
The assumptions used to calculate the net pension expense were:
 
<TABLE> 
<CAPTION> 
                                                    1995        1994
                                                    ----        ---- 
<S>                                                 <C>         <C> 
Expected long-term rate of return on assets         8.75%       8.75%
Discount rate                                       8.00%       8.75%
Rate of increase in compensation levels             4.00%       6.00%
</TABLE> 
 
The status of the pension plan at December 31 is as follows:
 
<TABLE> 
<CAPTION> 
                                                  1995        1994
                                                --------    --------
                                                  (000'S OMITTED)
<S>                                             <C>         <C>  
 Actuarial present value of benefit
  obligations:
 Accumulated benefit obligation,
  including vested benefits of $33,422                                
  in 1995 and $25,147 in 1994                   $(33,736)   $(25,322) 
                                                ========    ========  
 
 Projected benefit obligation                   $(42,161)   $(31,265)
 Plan assets at fair value                        36,162      28,929
                                                --------    --------
 Projected benefit obligation in excess                               
  of plan assets                                  (5,999)     (2,336) 
 Remaining unrecognized initial net                                   
  asset                                           (1,263)     (1,474) 
 Unrecognized net loss from past
  experience different from that assumed           7,031       7,877
 
 Prepaid pension cost, beginning of year          11,639       7,572
                                                --------    --------
 Prepaid pension cost, end of year              $ 11,408    $ 11,639
                                                ========    ========
</TABLE>

For financial reporting purposes, the prepaid pension cost at December 31, 1995
and 1994 has been classified as a non-admitted asset.

The Company's pension plan assets consist of an interest in the Company's
general account, participation in one of the Company's separate accounts
(consisting primarily of equity and debt securities) and participation in
certain other funds managed by outside investment advisors.

Benefit payments from the plan made on behalf of retirees were approximately
$2.3 million in 1995 and $11.1 million in 1994.  Periodic annuity benefits are
covered by annuities purchased by the plan from the Company.  During 1995 and
1994, the Company made contributions to the plan of $3.3 million and $7.0
million, respectively.

In addition to the above noncontributory plan, all employees may participate in
a 401(k) savings plan under which the Company matches half of the employees'
basic contribution up to 6% of salary.  The cost of this plan was approximately
$1.4 million in 1995 and $1.2 million in 1994.

In addition to the Company's defined benefit pension plan, the Company has two
defined benefit postretirement plans covering substantially all salaried
employees of the Company and its subsidiaries.  Employees may become eligible
for such benefits upon attainment of retirement age while in the employ of the
Company and satisfaction of service requirements.  One plan provides medical and
dental benefits, and the second plan provides life insurance benefits.  The
postretirement plans are contributory for those individuals who retire with less
than twenty years of eligible service, with retiree contributions adjusted
annually, and contain other cost-sharing features, such as deductibles and
coinsurance.  The accounting for the medical and dental plans anticipates future
cost-sharing changes to the written plan that are consistent with the Company's
expressed intent to increase the retiree contribution rate annually for the
expected general inflation rate for the year.

                                       29
<PAGE>
 
The accounting for such postretirement benefits is in accordance with Statement
of Financial Accounting Standards No. 106, "Employer's Accounting for
Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions."

The components of net postretirement benefit cost are as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            1995     1994
                                           ------   ------
                                           (000'S OMITTED)
<S>                                        <C>      <C>  
Service cost                               $  483   $  463
Interest cost on projected benefit            986    1,038
 obligation                                ------   ------
Net postretirement benefit cost            $1,469   $1,501
                                           ======   ======
</TABLE>

During 1995 and 1994, $279 thousand and $218 thousand, respectively, of
postretirement benefit expense was allocated to the Company's wholly owned
subsidiaries.

The following table shows the plan's combined status reconciled with the amounts
reported in the Company's statement of financial condition:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            1995      1994
                                          -------   -------
                                           (000'S OMITTED)
<S>                                       <C>       <C>
Accumulated postretirement benefit
 obligation ("APBO"):
 Retirees                                 $ 4,189   $ 3,969
 Fully eligible active plan participants    3,191     2,989
 Other active plan participants             4,598     4,438
                                          -------   -------
  Total APBO                               11,978    11,396
Plan assets at fair value                       -         -
                                          -------   -------
APBO in excess of plan assets              11,978    11,396
Unrecognized net loss                      (2,972)   (3,230)
                                          -------   -------
Accrued postretirement obligation         $ 9,006   $ 8,166
                                          =======   =======
</TABLE>

The weighted average annual assumed rate of increase in the per capita cost of
covered benefit (i.e., health care cost trend rate) for the medical plan is
approximately 9.25% for 1995.  The health care cost trend rate assumption has a
significant effect on the amounts reported.  For example, increasing the assumed
health care cost trend rates by one percentage point in each year would increase
the accumulated postretirement obligation for the plan as of December 31, 1995
by $1.1 million and the aggregate of the service and interest cost components of
the net periodic benefit cost for 1995 by $.2 million.

The weighted average discount rate used in determining the APBO was 8.0% at
December 31, 1995 and 8.75% at December 31, 1994.

7. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
   -----------------------------

Rental expenses were $8.0 million and $11.4 million in 1995 and 1994,
respectively, of which $2.7 million and $2.5 million were allocated to the
Company's wholly owned subsidiaries, respectively.  The minimum rental
commitments under noncancelable operating leases are as follows:  1996, $3.0
million; 1997, $2.9 million, 1998, $2.6 million, 1999, $2.0 million, and 2000,
$1.3 million.  Such leases are principally for leased office space, furniture
and equipment.  Certain office space leases provide for adjustments to reflect
changes in real estate taxes and other operating expenses.

                                       30
<PAGE>
 
The Company is involved in various legal actions which have arisen in the course
of the Company's business.  In the opinion of management, the ultimate liability
with respect to such lawsuits as well as other contingencies is not considered
to be material in relation to the Company's financial statements.

8. FEDERAL INCOME TAXES
   --------------------

The provisions contained in the Tax Reform Act of 1986 enabled the Company's
pension business (the core of its operations) to remain tax-exempt; however, the
nonpension insurance business (group insurance coverage and certain annuity
business) was deemed to be taxable.  The tax provision for Mutual of America
Life Insurance Company and its subsidiaries was calculated in accordance with
the Internal Revenue Code, as amended.  Mutual of America Life Insurance Company
and its life insurance subsidiary file federal tax returns on a separate company
basis.  The noninsurance subsidiaries of the Company file a consolidated tax
return.

9. UNCONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES
   ---------------------------

The Company's subsidiaries' operations include insurance and certain financial
service related activities.  At December 31, 1995, subsidiary assets,
liabilities and revenues were $1.34 billion, $1.26 billion and $272.3 million,
respectively.  At December 31, 1994, subsidiary assets, liabilities and revenues
were $1.26 billion, $1.18 billion and $216.6 million, respectively.

The Company has incurred operating and investment-related expenses in connection
with the use of its personnel and property on behalf of its subsidiaries.
During 1995 and 1994, operating and investment-related expenses of $22.5 million
and $1.2 million and $16.8 million and $1.1 million, respectively, were
allocated to its subsidiaries.

                                       31
<PAGE>
 
                                    PART C

                               OTHER INFORMATION


Item 24.  Financial Statements and Exhibits
          ---------------------------------

          (a)  Financial Statements

          All required financial statements are included in Part B of this
Registration Statement.
              
          (b)  Exhibits      

         
    
               9. Consent of Graham & James LLP, Attorneys-at-Law.

               10. Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP., Independent
          Accountants.

               14(a) Financial Data Schedule for Mutual of
          America Separate Account No. 2 by module.

               14(b) Financial Data Schedule for Mutual of
          America Life Insurance Company.      

                                      C-1
<PAGE>
 
Item 25.  Directors and Officers of the Depositor
          ---------------------------------------

<TABLE>     
<CAPTION> 
Name and Principal                  Positions and Offices
 Business Address                       With Depositor
- ------------------                  ---------------------
<S>                                       <C> 
Clifford L. Alexander, Jr.                Director
Washington, D.C.

Patricia A. Cahill                        Director
Denver, Colorado  

John R. Dunne                             Director
Albany, New York

Roselyn P. Epps, M.D.                     Director
Bethesda, Maryland

Dudley H. Hafner                          Director
Dallas, Texas 

Earle H. Harbison, Jr.                    Director
St. Louis, Missouri

Frances R. Hesselbein                     Director
New York, New York

William Kahn                              Director
St. Louis, Missouri

LaSalle D. Leffall, Jr., M.D.             Director
Washington, D.C.

Michael A. Pelavin                        Director
Flint, Michigan

Alan Reed                                 Director
Buffalo Grove, Illinois

Francis H. Schott                         Director
New York, New York

O. Stanley Smith, Jr.                     Director
Columbia, South Carolina

Sheila M. Smythe                          Director
Valhalla, New York

Elie Wiesel                               Director
New York, New York

                               Officers-Directors
                               ------------------

William J. Flynn                          Chairman of the Board

Thomas J. Moran                           President and Chief Executive
                                          Officer

Richard J. Ciecka                         Vice Chairman of the Board

                                 Other Officers
                                 --------------

Manfred Altstadt                          Senior Executive Vice President
                                          and Chief Financial Officer

Diane M. Aramony                          Senior Vice President,
                                          Human Resources

Deborah Swinford Becker                   Senior Vice President and
                                          Associate General Counsel 
</TABLE>      

                                      C-2
<PAGE>
 
    
<TABLE> 
<S>                                       <C> 
Nicholas A. Branchina                     Senior Vice President and
                                          Associate Treasurer

William Breneisen                         Executive Vice President,
                                          Office of Technology

Allen J. Bruckheimer                      Senior Vice President and
                                          Associate Treasurer

J. Thomas Burkard                         Senior Field Vice President,
                                          Special Markets

Patrick Burke                             Senior Vice President,
                                          Special Markets

Patrick A. Burns                          Senior Executive Vice President
                                          and General Counsel

John Cerrato                              Senior Vice President, Corporate
                                          Services

Edward Cole                               Senior Vice President,
                                          MIS Operations

William S. Conway                         Executive Vice President, Marketing

Rita Conyers                              Executive Vice President,
                                          Corporate Communications,
                                          Training and Leadership
                                          Development

Salvatore R. Curiale                      Senior Executive Vice President, 
                                          Technical Operations

Linda DeHooge                             Senior Vice President and
                                          Assistant Secretary

William A. DeMitt                         Executive Vice President and Treasurer

Warren A. Essner                          Senior Vice President and
                                          Assistant to the President and
                                          Chief Executive Officer

James E. Flynn                            Senior Vice President,
                                          Field Operations

Roger Ferrara                             Senior Vice President, Financial
                                          Advisory Services

James M. Fox                              Executive Vice President, Real
                                          Estate Management, Internal 
                                          Audit and Public Relations      
</TABLE> 

                                      C-3
<PAGE>
 
    
<TABLE> 
<S>                                       <C> 
 
Michael Gallagher                         Senior Vice President, Direct 
Boca Raton, FL                            Response/Marketing

Harold J. Gannon                          Senior Vice President, Corporate Tax

Gordon Gaspard                            Senior Vice President,
                                          Technical Services

Robert Giaquinto                          Senior Vice President,
                                          MIS Operations

Thomas E. Gilliam                         Executive Vice President and Assistant
                                          to the Vice Chairman

Thomas Harwood                            Senior Vice President,
                                          Field Administration

Raymond J. Hayes                          Senior Vice President,
                                          Real Estate Management

Sandra Hersko                             Senior Vice President,
                                          Technical Administrator

Edward J. T. Kenney                       Senior Vice President, Assistant to 
                                          the President and Chief Executive 
                                          Officer

Gregory A. Kleva, Jr.                     Executive Vice President and
                                          Deputy General Counsel

Stephanie J. Kopp                         Executive Vice President
                                          and Corporate Secretary

Robert Kordecki                           Senior Vice President,
                                          National Accounts

Amir Lear                                 Senior Vice President, Office of the 
                                          President

Stanley M. Lenkowicz                      Senior Vice President and
                                          Deputy General Counsel

Thomas MacMurray                          Senior Field Vice President,
                                          National Accounts

Robert W. Maull                           Senior Vice President and Corporate
                                          Actuary

George Medlin                             Senior Vice President,
                                          Internal Audit

Lynn M. Nalder                            Senior Vice President, Training
Boca Raton, FL                            and Leadership Development      
</TABLE>  

                                      C-4
<PAGE>
 
     
<TABLE> 
<S>                                       <C> 
Roger F. Napoleon                         Senior Vice President and
                                          Associate General Counsel

Theodore J. O'Dell                        Senior Vice President and
                                          Controller

James C. Peterson                         Senior Vice President, Training
                                          and Leadership Development

William Rose                              Senior Vice President,
                                          Individual Markets

Dennis J. Routledge                       Senior Vice President,
                                          LAN/Telecommunications

Robert W. Ruane                           Senior Vice President,
                                          Corporate Communications

William G. Shannon                        Senior Vice President,
                                          Individual Financial Planning

Walter W. Siegel                          Senior Vice President, Actuarial 
                                          Consulting

Marc Slutzky                              Senior Vice President and
                                          Actuary

Joan M. Squires                           Senior Vice President, MIS Business
                                          Applications 

Paul Travers                              Senior Vice President, Investment
                                          Advisory Services

Edward Wenzel                             Senior Vice President,
                                          Corporate Markets

Raymond Yeager                            Senior Vice President,
                                          MIS Operations

Paul R. Zwilling                          Executive Vice President
                                          and Chief Actuary      
</TABLE> 
    
The business address of all officers and directors is 320 Park Avenue, New
York, New York 10022, unless otherwise noted.       

Item 27.  Number of Holders of Securities
          -------------------------------
    
          As of March 31, 1996, there were 300 Participants in Separate Account
No. 2 attributable to holders of 457 Contracts registered hereby.     

                                      C-5 
<PAGE>
 
                                  SIGNATURES
    
 Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the Investment
Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of the
requirements for effectiveness of this post-amendment to Registration Statement
pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused
this post-effective amendment to the Registration Statement to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of New York,
the State of New York, the 26th day of April, 1996.      

              
                                  MUTUAL OF AMERICA SEPARATE
                                     ACCOUNT NO. 2 Registrant)



                                 MUTUAL OF AMERICA LIFE  
                                    INSURANCE COMPANY (Depositor)


                                 By: /s/ Manfred Altstadt
                                     --------------------
                                     Manfred Altstadt
                                     Senior Executive Vice 
                                     President and Chief
                                     Financial Officer


         

    
 Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
post-effective amendment to the Registration Statement has been signed below by
the following persons in the capacities indicated on April 26, 1996.      


 Signature                                    Title


    *
__________________________           Chairman of the Board; 
William J. Flynn                     Director


    *                                Chief Executive Officer and
__________________________           President; Director
Thomas J. Moran                      (Principal Executive Officer)


                                     Senior Executive Vice  
                                     President and Chief    
                                     Financial Officer    
                                     Principal Financial and
/s/ Manfred Altstadt                 Accounting Officer)
- --------------------                                                    
Manfred Altstadt

    *
__________________________           Director
Clifford L. Alexander, Jr.


     *
__________________________          Director
Patricia A. Cahill


     *
__________________________         Director
Richard J. Ciecka

                                      C-6

<PAGE>
 

         
__________________________         Director
John R. Dunne


     *
__________________________         Director
Roselyn P. Epps, M.D.


     *
__________________________         Director
Dudley H. Hafner                   
                                   
                                   
         
__________________________         Director
Earle H. Harbison, Jr.             

                                   
     *                             
___________________________        Director
Frances R. Hesselbein              
                                   
                                   
      *                            
___________________________        Director
William Kahn                       
                                   
                                   
      *                            
___________________________        Director
LaSalle D. Leffall, Jr., M.D.      
                                   
                                   
      *                            
___________________________        Director
Michael A. Pelavin                 
                                   
                                   
         
___________________________        Director
Alan Reed                          
                                   
                                   
      *                            
___________________________        Director
Francis H. Schott                  
                                   
                                   
      *                            
___________________________        Director
O. Stanley Smith, Jr.              
                                   
                                   
      *                            
___________________________        Director
Sheila M. Smythe                   
                                   
                                   
      *                            
___________________________        Director
Elie Wiesel

*By /s/ Manfred Altstadt
    --------------------
    Manfred Altstadt
    Attorney-in-Fact

                                      C-7
<PAGE>
 
                                 EXHIBIT INDEX

     No.                                                          Page
     ---                                                          ----
    

     27.1    Financial Data Schedule for Mutual of
             America Separate Account No. 2. 

     27.2    Financial Data Schedule for Mutual of
             America Life Insurance Company.      
             
     99.9.   Consent of Graham & James LLP, Attorneys-at-Law.

     99.10.  Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP, Independent
             Accountants.                 


<PAGE>
 
                                                                   EXHIBIT 99.9

                           CONSENT OF GRAHAM & JAMES LLP

  We hereby consent to all references to our firm included in Registration
Statement No. 33-5609.



                                        GRAHAM & JAMES LLP



New York, New York
April 29, 1996

<PAGE>
 
                                                                   EXHIBIT 99.10

                   CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS


As independent public accountants, we hereby consent to the use of our reports
(and to all references to our Firm) included in or made a part of Registration
Statement No. 33-5609.



                                 ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP


New York, New York
April 29, 1996

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<PAGE>
 
<ARTICLE> 6
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1995
<PERIOD-END>                               DEC-31-1995
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                      848,180,513
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                     971,674,230
<RECEIVABLES>                                        0
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       0
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                         3,892,090
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                             975,566,320
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                            0
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                                  0
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                             0
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                      221,734,354
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                      186,774,385
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                            0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                              0
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                   123,493,717
<NET-ASSETS>                               975,566,320
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                           34,837,596
<INTEREST-INCOME>                                    0
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                              10,749,689
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                     24,087,907
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                     8,400,107
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                  133,521,542
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                      166,009,556
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                            0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                             0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                              0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                          0
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                                  0
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                     275,214,666
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                        9,996,294
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                             10,749,689
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                             6.39
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                      0
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                              0
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                            0
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                               7.65
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                      0
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<PAGE>
 
<ARTICLE> 7
       
<S>                             <C>                         
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS                    12-MOS            
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1995           DEC-31-1994
<PERIOD-START>                             JAN-01-1995           JAN-01-1994
<PERIOD-END>                               DEC-31-1995           DEC-31-1994
<DEBT-HELD-FOR-SALE>                                 0                     0
<DEBT-CARRYING-VALUE>                    3,955,508,328         4,027,388,054
<DEBT-MARKET-VALUE>                                  0                     0
<EQUITIES>                                  67,209,605            57,953,336
<MORTGAGE>                                  50,056,580            60,144,482
<REAL-ESTATE>                              323,745,247           260,640,755
<TOTAL-INVEST>                           6,887,715,835         4,406,126,627
<CASH>                                      84,016,362            32,178,425
<RECOVER-REINSURE>                                   0                     0
<DEFERRED-ACQUISITION>                               0                     0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                           6,982,340,926         6,455,773,560
<POLICY-LOSSES>                                      0                     0
<UNEARNED-PREMIUMS>                                  0                     0
<POLICY-OTHER>                                       0                     0
<POLICY-HOLDER-FUNDS>                    4,058,331,298         3,989,887,095
<NOTES-PAYABLE>                            136,993,262           136,993,262
<COMMON>                                             0                     0
                                0                     0
                                          0                     0
<OTHER-SE>                                           0                     0
<TOTAL-LIABILITY-AND-EQUITY>             6,982,340,926         6,455,773,560
                                 628,120,058           628,873,707
<INVESTMENT-INCOME>                        418,460,126           386,148,078
<INVESTMENT-GAINS>                         (1,862,749)               594,478
<OTHER-INCOME>                               1,107,228             1,070,651
<BENEFITS>                                 663,261,767           593,701,138
<UNDERWRITING-AMORTIZATION>                          0                     0
<UNDERWRITING-OTHER>                                 0                     0
<INCOME-PRETAX>                             40,973,017            50,580,218
<INCOME-TAX>                                    22,814                32,513
<INCOME-CONTINUING>                         39,133,082            51,207,209
<DISCONTINUED>                                       0                     0
<EXTRAORDINARY>                                      0                     0
<CHANGES>                                            0                     0
<NET-INCOME>                                29,133,082            51,207,209
<EPS-PRIMARY>                                        0                     0
<EPS-DILUTED>                                        0                     0
<RESERVE-OPEN>                           3,989,887,095         3,874,191,849
<PROVISION-CURRENT>                        147,491,075           161,371,093
<PROVISION-PRIOR>                          161,371,093             9,685,185
<PAYMENTS-CURRENT>                         663,744,583           592,763,367
<PAYMENTS-PRIOR>                           592,763,369           594,015,982
<RESERVE-CLOSE>                          4,058,331,298         3,989,887,095
<CUMULATIVE-DEFICIENCY>                              0                     0
        

</TABLE>


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