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- @1044 CHAP 8
-
- ┌──────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ PENSION AND PROFIT SHARING PLANS AND IRA'S │
- └──────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
-
- Qualified retirement plans (pension and profit sharing
- plans) are the last great tax shelter. If you run a small
- business that is generating profits that you don't need to
- reinvest in the business or to live on, socking away as
- many dollars as possible into a "qualified" pension or
- profit sharing plan or into an IRA (Individual Retirement
- Account) can be a winning proposition, for several important
- reasons:
-
- . The money that you (or your corporation) put into
- the plan or IRA is currently tax-deductible for
- federal and state income tax purposes.
-
- . Once the money is contributed to a retirement plan
- trust or IRA, it can be invested and can compound
- tax-free, until you begin withdrawing it (voluntarily,
- after age 59 1/2, or required withdrawals after age
- 70 1/2). That is, dividends or interest earned on
- the retirement fund, or capital gains on stocks or
- other investments, are not taxable to the retirement
- plan trust or IRA account, as a rule.
-
- . When you do begin withdrawing funds from your plan or
- your IRA at retirement age, you may be earning less
- income overall, and thus may be in a lower tax bracket
- when you finally start to collect your pension. (Of
- course, no one knows the future, so there is always the
- risk that income tax rates in general could be much
- HIGHER when you retire than now. Even so, you will
- still probably come out far ahead if your retirement
- assets have had the opportunity to compound and grow
- tax-free for 20 or 30 years until you finally retire
- and have to pay tax on amounts distributed out to you).
-
- . Also, with qualified plans other than IRA's, there are
- presently some fairly significant tax benefits, in the
- form of lower tax rates, if you take all your pension
- or profit sharing plan assets as a single "lump sum,"
- since the tax law permits you to compute the tax on
- such a lump sum under a very favorable 5-year averaging
- method. (However, Congress repealed this favorable
- lump sum averaging treatment, as part of 1996 tax
- legislation enacted in August, 1996.)
-
- . While one of the main drawbacks of putting money into a
- retirement plan is the fact that you will not ordinarily
- have access to that money until you are age 59 1/2
- (unless you die, become permanently disabled, etc.),
- you may be able to borrow up to $50,000 from your
- retirement plan account in certain instances, at least
- in the case of a plan maintained by a corporation other
- than an S corporation. Thus you may still retain some
- access to the funds, within strict limits: No loans to
- your business, must pay fair interest rate on the loan,
- provide adequate security, and must repay the loan over
- a 5-year period, except for a loan used to acquire a
- principal residence).
-
- At a time when real estate and most other kinds of tax
- shelters of the type that flourished in the past are either
- a dead letter or are extremely limited, pension and profit
- sharing plans are an extremely attractive, low-risk option
- for small business owners, since the money placed in
- such plans can be invested in a fairly wide variety of
- investments, including stocks, bonds, money market funds,
- CD's, and other passive types of investments. Some limited
- investments in UNLEVERAGED real estate are also possible.
-
- DON'T be misled into thinking that money you put into a
- retirement account is tax-free. While you may get a
- deduction or be able to exclude the amount put into a
- plan from your current taxable income, what you are really
- getting is a DEFERRAL of taxes until you retire, die, or
- otherwise withdraw funds from your IRA or other retirement
- account. This deferral is still quite beneficial, of
- course, since you not only defer tax on the money you put
- into the plan, but also on all the investment income
- and gains on such money, until you finally receive your
- retirement benefits. Put it this way: If you have a
- choice of receiving a $10,000 bonus and paying tax on it
- today, and then paying tax on any interest you earn on
- that money from now on as well, versus having it put in
- trust for you and invested at interest, and paying tax on
- the $10,000 (plus whatever it has grown to from investing
- it) 30 or 40 years from now, which do YOU think is a
- better deal, tax-wise? Time is money, and deferring
- income taxes for several decades can be almost as good as
- paying no tax at all.
-
- NOTE REGARDING STATE TAXATION OF RETIREMENT INCOME: On
- January 10, 1996, President Clinton signed legislation that
- forbids states from taxing the pensions of former residents.
- This has been a major problem for taxpayers who earned
- pensions in high-tax states such as California or New York,
- but retired to low- or no-tax jurisdictions such as Florida,
- Nevada, or Texas, only to find that the state of their
- former residence was still seeking to find them and subject
- their pension income to California or New York income taxes.
- The new legislation prohibits those states, as well as a
- number of other states that had done so, from taxing the
- retirement income of non-residents, including income from
- both qualified retirement plans and certain nonqualified
- deferred compensation plans. This is a major win for
- taxpayers, and makes retirement plans even more advantageous
- as tax deferral vehicles. The new law is effective for
- amounts received after December 31, 1995.
-
- The key characteristics of all the major types of retirement
- plans, of which there are many, are discussed below.
-
-
- INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS (IRA'S)
-
- The simplest form of retirement account you can set up is
- an IRA. You can quickly and easily open an account with
- almost any bank, saving and loan, mutual fund company, or
- stock brokerage firm.
-
- The main advantages of the IRA are:
-
- . Simplicity. It usually costs nothing to open up
- an IRA or to maintain it, although most stockbrokers
- and mutual funds will usually charge a small setup
- fee of $25 or so, as well as an annual maintenance
- fee of $10 or $15. Banks, S & L's, and other financial
- institutions rarely charge any such fees.
-
- . You don't have to cover any employees. For all other
- types of retirement plans, if your business has
- employees, you must also contribute money to the plan
- on their behalf, as well as for yourself. There is
- no such requirement for a regular IRA.
-
- . You don't even have to be in business, or making a
- profit, to set up an IRA and make tax-deductible
- contributions to it. As long as you have earned
- income from some source, whether it be your business
- or a job with an employer, you can make IRA
- contributions.
-
- The drawbacks to the IRA are:
-
- . You are limited to an annual contribution to an IRA
- of $2000 (or $4000, if you have a non-working spouse,
- and you contribute at least $2000 to a separate IRA
- for your spouse).
-
- . Even this limited contribution amount will not be
- deductible, if you are covered by any other kind of
- qualified pension or profit sharing plan and your
- adjusted gross income ("AGI") exceeds $50,000. The
- deduction begins to "phase-out" when income exceeds
- $40,000, or, if you are not filing a joint return,
- you lose the IRA deduction if your AGI exceeds $35,000
- (with the "phase-out" starting at $25,000 of AGI).
-
- Thus, while an IRA is a nice place to put a couple of
- thousand dollars a year for an additional tax deduction,
- if you don't have any other kind of pension plan coverage,
- or if you make under $50,000 (or $35,000 if single) a year,
- it's still not enough of a deduction to enable you to build
- up a very large nest egg for your retirement. To do that,
- you will need to set up either a "SEP-IRA" or a qualified
- pension or profit sharing plan.
-
-
- SIMPLIFIED EMPLOYEE PENSION PLANS ("SEP-IRA'S"
-
- SEP-IRA's, or SEP's, as they are also called, have many
- of the benefits of qualified plans, while retaining much
- of the simplicity and low administrative costs of IRA's.
- To set up an SEP, any business, whether or not it is
- incorporated, merely fills out a simple IRS form (Form
- 5305-SEP), which becomes the plan document. It isn't
- even necessary to file this form with the IRS.
-
- The employer then sets up individual SEP-IRA accounts for
- each employee who is required to be covered under the
- plan, and makes contributions each year into their
- accounts. The contributions which must be a certain
- percentage of each employee's salary or wages (and of the
- owner's net profit from the business, in the case of an
- unincorporated business), up to a maximum of 15% of
- earnings. The maximum deductible amount that can be
- contributed for any single participant for a taxable year
- is limited to $30,000, which is the same as for "defined
- contribution" pension and profit sharing plans (discussed
- below).
-
- Advantages of the SEP-IRA:
-
- . It provides a deduction comparable to that of many
- qualified "defined contribution plans," and far
- greater than that for a regular IRA. It is
- especially suitable for a sole proprietor or
- partnership that has no employees.
-
- . It is extremely simple to set up, and the compliance
- requirements for an SEP under ERISA (the Employee
- Retirement Income Security Act of 1974) are very
- minimal. Thus you won't have to pay hundreds, or
- thousands of dollars a year to lawyers, accountants,
- benefit consultants and/or actuarial consultants to
- keep the plan "legal" under ever-changing IRS rules
- and onerous IRS and Department of Labor paperwork
- requirements, all of which can make it very expensive
- to maintain "qualified plans."
-
- . The amounts contributed to the plan are put in
- individual accounts for the employees who participate
- in it, so your "fiduciary" exposure for making bad
- investments with employee pension plan funds is
- virtually eliminated.
-
- Drawbacks of SEP-IRA's include the following:
-
- . While they are simple, you must contribute a uniform
- percentage of earnings for yourself and all employees
- who are covered by the plan. This is different from
- the various types of qualified plans, which can be
- tailored so that, within certain limits, you can put
- in a larger percentage of your current earnings than
- you must contribute on behalf of your lower-paid (or
- younger) employees.
-
- . The maximum amount deductible is limited to 15% of
- a participant's earnings, or $30,000, whichever is
- less, which is the same as for a qualified profit
- sharing plan, but less than for a qualified "defined
- contribution" pension plan, for which the limit is
- the lesser of 25% or $30,000. (And far less than
- for a "defined benefit" plan, for which the amount
- of the deductible contribution for a participant
- is determined by actuarial calculations, and MAY BE
- WELL OVER $100,000 A YEAR if the participant is old
- enough and has a high enough income.)
-
- . You have much less leeway in excluding certain
- part-time employees from the plan. A SEP requires
- you to cover any employee who is 21 years old or
- older and who has performed services for you during
- at least 3 of the preceding 5 years and who receives
- at least $300 a year (indexed for inflation -- $400
- in 1995 and 1996) in compensation. Thus, just about
- anyone who works for you during 3 different years
- must be covered. (However, you may exclude union
- employees who are covered under a collective bargaining
- agreement, or NONresident aliens who don't receive
- any U.S.-source earned income from your firm.) For
- qualified plans, by contrast, you can exclude any
- employee who has less than 1000 hours of service
- during the plan's fiscal year.
-
- . All contributions made to participants' accounts are
- fully vested, immediately. This means that when an
- employee leaves your firm, he or she takes whatever
- is in his or her account with them (although they
- may leave it in their IRA account rather than pay
- tax on it by withdrawing it). This is in contrast
- to qualified plans, where the plan can provide for
- vesting schedules, so that employees who leave after
- only a few years of working for you will "forfeit"
- all or part of the amount you have put into the plan
- for them, which either reduces the amount you have
- to contribute to the qualified plan for the year,
- or gets allocated to the accounts of the other
- participants (which would include you).
-
-
- "SIMPLE" RETIREMENT PLANS
- -------------------------
-
- The Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 created a new
- type of plan, sort of a cross between an IRA and a 401K
- plan, called SIMPLE (Savings Incentive Match Plan for
- Employees). These can be set up as either SIMPLE IRAs or
- SIMPLE 401K plans, and are available for small employers
- who had 100 or fewer employees who earned at least $5,000
- in compensation for the preceding year. Under SIMPLE
- plans, an eligible employee can elect to contribute a
- percentage of his or her compensation to the plan, up to a
- dollar limit of $6,000 a year.
-
- If a SIMPLE plan is set up as an IRA, it will not be
- considered discriminatory if the employer either:
-
- . Matches 100% of emloyee elective contributions up to
- 3% of pay (but in 2 years out of 5, the employer may
- match as little as 1% if employees are properly
- notified of the reduced matching percentage); or
-
- . Contributes 2% of each eligible employee's compensation
- whether or not the employee makes any elective
- contributions to the plan.
-
- If set up as part of a 401K plan, the SIMPLE plan will not
- be considered to be discriminatory if the employer either:
-
- . Matches 100% of employees' elective deferrals up to 3%
- of their pay; or
-
- . Contributes 2% of each eligible employee's compensation
- whether or not the employee makes any elective
- contributions to the plan.
-
- SIMPLE plans are expected to be very popular, and can be set
- up after December 31, 1996.
-
- QUALIFIED RETIREMENT PLANS
- --------------------------
-
- "Qualified" retirement plans tend to be a lot more complex
- to set up and administer than IRA's or SEP-IRA plans, but
- also tend to offer more flexibility and greater tax benefits,
- of various kinds. Note that "qualified" retirement plans
- include Keogh plans set up by and for sole proprietors or
- partners in a partnership; S corporation retirement plans
- that cover the employees (including "shareholder-employees")
- of S corporations, and corporate plans set up for the
- employees of a C corporation. Keogh plans and S corporation
- plans are virtually identical in every way to corporate
- plans, except for one significant difference: The
- "Owner-employees" in a Keogh plan or "shareholder-employees"
- in an S corporation retirement plan are prohibited from
- borrowing money from the retirement plan, for any reason,
- while employees (including the owners) of a C corporation
- may sometimes borrow up to $50,000 from the pension or
- profit sharing plan maintained by the C corporation.
-
- For a sole proprietor with no employees, a Keogh plan
- can usually be set up for him- or herself with a bank,
- mutual fund, stockbroker or other financial institution,
- with virtually the same ease and only a little bit more
- in the way of tax compliance obligations than opening an
- IRA. However, for a corporate plan, or a Keogh plan where
- employees are involved, things tend to get much trickier
- and much more expensive in a hurry.
-
- If you hire a law firm or employee benefit consultant to
- design and set up a qualified plan for your firm, you will
- usually incur substantial legal or consulting fees, which
- may include paying them to go to the IRS for a "determination
- letter," a piece of paper that blesses your company's
- plan, saying that it meets all the requirements for tax
- qualification. And you can also usually count on some
- extensive annual administrative expenses thereafter to
- pay your CPA or benefit consultant to do all the tax, Labor
- Department, and other filings that may be required to keep
- your plan "qualified," all of which can run into serious
- money, year after year.
-
- However, you can usually keep your front-end costs down
- quite a bit if you are willing to adopt a "canned" (or
- "prototype") plan, for which some benefit firm, CPA firm
- or law firm has already gotten basic IRS approval, as to
- form.
-
- Many financial institutions, such as mutual funds, banks
- and brokerage houses and insurance companies, also offer
- such "canned" plans at a nominal cost, if you let them
- manage your pension plan money in their mutual fund, bank
- trust fund, or insured pension account, and often do much
- or all of the accounting and administration of the plan
- for you as well, as part of the package. If you are
- comfortable with their investment "product," this can be
- a cheaper alternative than hiring CPAs or consultants to
- handle the highly technical administrative and compliance
- chores for your company, which can cost thousands of dollars
- a year, even for a relatively small plan with only 10 or 20
- participating employees.
-
- "Qualified" retirement plans come in two basic flavors,
- PENSION plans and PROFIT SHARING plans, with a lot of
- variations on each. All of them have a few things in
- common. The most important common features are the
- minimum coverage, participation and vesting rules.
-
- The minimum coverage rules require that certain
- percentages of rank and file employees be covered or
- eligible to participate in the plan. Not all employees
- are necessarily "eligible" employees, however. You may
- exclude certain classifications of employees, so long as
- you make eligible most (a minimum of 70%, plus certain
- other complex calculations that must also be satisfied)
- of the NON-highly compensated employees of the company --
- or else meet an alternative non-discriminatory "average
- benefits" test. (As with SEP's, unionized employees and
- nonresident alien employees with no U.S.-source earned
- income don't have to be taken into account at all.)
-
- The minimum participation rules require that your plan,
- whether is it maintained by your corporation, or as a
- "Keogh" plan in the case of a sole proprietorship or
- partnership, must generally cover ALL eligible employees
- by the later of the date on which they reach age 21 or
- complete one year of service (which means, generally
- speaking, a 12-month period in which they perform at
- least 1,000 hours of service for your company). However,
- if benefits are 100% vested immediately for all participants,
- the plan may require a 2-year waiting period, rather than
- one year, before a new employee can begin to participate
- in the plan.
-
- The minimum vesting rules require a plan that is "top-heavy"
- must either fully vest a participant's account after he or
- she completes 3 years of service, or else must be 20%
- vested after 2 years of service, with an additional 20%
- vesting after each subsequent year of service, which means
- full vesting at the end of 6 years. ("Top-heavy" plans
- will include the plans set up by many small firms, where
- over 60% of the assets or accrued benefits under the plan
- are allocable to "key employees" --owners, officers,
- highly-paid employees, etc.)
-
- Plans that are not considered "top-heavy" can be set up
- to vest over somewhat longer periods of service (5-year
- "cliff" vesting, or 20% a year "graded" vesting, starting
- after 3 years of service).
-
-
- All qualified plans come under two general categories:
- "defined benefit plans" ("DBP's") (which are a special
- kind of pension plan) and "defined contribution plans"
- ("DCP's"), which include all other kinds of pension plans
- as well as all profit sharing plans.
-
-
- DEFINED CONTRIBUTION PLANS
- --------------------------
-
- Defined contribution plans all have certain things in
- common:
-
- . The plan document defines the amount that will be put
- into the plan each year (the contribution) by the
- employer, based in most cases on the compensation earned
- that year by each of the participants. The benefits
- the participants will receive many years down the
- road, when they retire, are not defined, but will
- depend on how well (or poorly) the assets put into
- the plan for their individual accounts are invested
- and managed.
-
- . You don't generally need to hire an actuarial firm
- to do an actuarial report for the plan, in the case
- of a DCP. This is important, because actuaries charge
- a lot of money, usually a minimum of several thousand
- dollars a year to do the actuarial certification that
- is required for most defined benefit plans (DBP's).
-
- . Each employee in a DCP has an individual account under
- the plan, and must receive a report each year, showing
- how much his or her invested account balance has grown
- (or shrunk) from investing, plus new amounts contributed
- to the account by the employer for the year, plus, in
- the case of a profit sharing plan, the amount of any
- forfeitures allocated to the account, where other
- participants have quit or been fired and have had part
- or all of their accounts forfeited in favor of the
- remaining plan participants.
-
- . Because of the individual accounts, DCP's can and often
- are set up so that each participant can "direct" the
- way the money in his or her account is invested. This
- can be a major administrative headache and added expense
- for the employer, but is often worth it, since:
-
- (a) by letting the employees manage their own
- accounts, you, as the employer, are off the
- hook (usually) in terms of legal exposure for
- making any bad investments; and
-
- (b) you, and your key or highly-compensated
- employees, may want to make your own investment
- decisions, and may want to put money into
- higher-risk investments than you would be
- comfortable investing the funds of lower paid
- participants in; so you can let the rank and
- file employees invest their smaller accounts
- in something safer, like money market funds,
- while you roll the dice on something a bit
- racier, like Ethiopian government bonds or
- penny mining stocks.
-
- . Contributions (which include allocations of forfeitures
- in the case of a profit sharing plan) to the account of
- any participant in a DCP may not ever exceed 25% of
- compensation, or $30,000, whichever is less, in any plan
- fiscal year.
-
- . Contributions can be "integrated" with Social Security.
- This means, as a practical matter, that a DCP can be
- set up so that on a certain "base compensation level"
- on which the employee is earning Social Security benefits
- (say $30,000 or $40,000), the employer can contribute a
- lower percentage of compensation than on higher levels
- of compensation. This will tend to skew contributions
- in favor of higher-compensated participants (such as
- yourself, ordinarily, if you are the owner or president
- of the company). For example, a plan might call for
- putting in 10% of the first $20,000 of compensation,
- and 15% on the excess. If you make $150,000 a year,
- and each of your 4 employees makes only $20,000 a year,
- this would mean that your contribution for each of
- them would be 10% of $20,000, or $2,000 each, while the
- contribution for you would be $2,000 plus 15% of the
- $130,000 of "excess" compensation over $20,000, or
- $19,500, for a total of $21,500 for you. From your
- perspective as an employer, this is a lot cheaper than
- contributing a flat 15% of all participants' income,
- which would cost you $3,000 for each of the 4 employees,
- rather than $2,000 apiece. (Contributions to DBP's can
- also be "integrated," but the methodology is quite
- different, although the overall effect is similar, to
- shift a higher percentage of contributions to high
- income participants, which is usually the goal in most
- small firms.)
-
- . As full-fledged qualified retirement plans, DCP's are
- subject to the numerous IRS and Department of Labor
- reporting and disclosure rules, which result in huge
- amounts of paperwork for all but the smallest and
- simplest of plans. See the key word item "ERISA"
- compliance requirements in this program, to get an
- idea of the large number of information returns, plan
- summaries, and other documents you must prepare and
- either file with the government or provide to your
- employees, if you maintain any kind of qualified
- retirement plan. This administrative burden is a
- significant and ongoing cost of maintaining such a
- qualified plan, and is one reason that SEP-IRA's have
- become quite popular among small companies, since they
- have virtually zero reporting and disclosure
- requirements.
-
- As noted above, there are two kinds of DCP's, profit sharing
- plans and a type of pension plan called a "money purchase"
- pension plan, each of which has several variations.
-
- PROFIT SHARING AND STOCK BONUS PLANS:
-
- Profit sharing plans are a type of qualified plan where
- annual contributions to the plan are entirely optional, and
- if the employer sets it up that way, can be based partly or
- entirely on company profits. This provides a lot of
- flexibility, so that in years when business is bad, a
- company can reduce its contribution to the plan, or even
- omit it entirely, as desired. In a good year, you can
- contribute up to 15% of each employee's compensation,
- limited to a total annual addition to an individual's
- account under the plan (including forfeitures from
- departing non-vested participants), of $30,000. Since
- forfeitures are allocated to participants' accounts in
- ADDITION to employer contributions, the total amount added
- to a remaining participant's account can be more than the
- 15% contributed by the employer -- but NOT over 25% of
- earnings or over $30,000 for the year.
-
- ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │CAUTION: The Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993│
- │has limited the amount of compensation that can│
- │be taken into account in computing pension or │
- │profit sharing plan contributions, to only the │
- │first $150,000 of compensation. Since 15% of │
- │$150,000 is only $22,500, this means that an │
- │individual participant in a profit sharing plan│
- │is now not really allowed to receive a $30,000 │
- │contribution in one year, even though he or she│
- │earns well over $150,000, in a profit sharing │
- │plan with a flat 15%-of-pay contribution │
- │formula. (However, forfeitures could still │
- │conceivably increase such a participant's │
- │allocation for the year to as much as a total │
- │of $30,000.) │
- └───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- Note that, in addition to limiting eligible compensation
- that can be counted to $150,000 a year, the new rules also
- require you to AGGREGATE the compensation of certain family
- members (spouse or children under age 19) who work for the
- company, so that if you and your spouse both earn $125,000
- a year from the company, for instance, only $150,000 of your
- total compensation of $250,000 would be counted (allocated
- between you). This requirement makes the new rules even
- more restrictive. (However, note that the Small Business
- Job Protection Act of 1996 has eliminated this aggregation
- requirement for plan years that begin after December 31,
- 1996.)
-
- Contributions to profit sharing plans are usually allocated
- to participants based strictly on compensation (and are
- often "integrated with Social Security", so that higher
- income participants receive a higher percentage of their
- income as contributions). However, it is also possible to
- do "age-weighted" plans, where each dollar of a participant's
- compensation is multiplied by a "present value" factor, which
- is based on his or her age, and which goes up exponentially
- as a person's age approaches the expected retirement age
- (usually 65). The resulting "benefit factor" for all
- participants is added up, and the company's plan contribution
- for the year is allocated based on each participant's
- percentage share of the total number, as a way of divvying
- up the amount employer's contribution to the plan.
-
- It is not uncommon, under such a plan, for a 45-year-old
- owner making $150,000 a year to get an allocation equal to
- 15% of his or her earnings, while a 25-year-old making
- only $20,000 a year would only get 3% of earnings under
- the age-weighted allocation method. Obviously, an
- age-weighted plan will be very attractive if you are both
- older than, and earning significantly more than, most or
- all of your covered employees. Note, also, that unlike
- Social Security "integration," which can only be done with
- one plan if your company has 2 plans, age-weighting can be
- done with both a pension plan (defined contribution plan)
- and a profit sharing plan, if you have both kinds of plans.
- (You'll probably need to see a benefit consultant about
- this allocation method, since many lawyers and CPA's are
- not yet familiar with age-weighted pension and profit
- sharing plans, and may give you a blank stare and try to
- change the subject if you ask them about such plans.)
-
- Thus, if you are 55, and make $150,000 a year, and most
- of your employees are in their twenties or thirties, and
- make about $20,000 a year, you can readily see how this
- kind of profit sharing formula could result in an allocation
- of a disproportionately large percentage of the plan
- contribution to you. This type of formula will only
- be permitted, however, if its overall effect is not
- considered discriminatory against lower-paid employees
- (such as where there are also a significant number of
- older employees who are in the lower-paid group).
-
-
- ===========================================================
- CAUTION REGARDING AGE-WEIGHTED PLANS: The IRS is currently
- very strongly urging Congress to enact legislation that
- would, if passed, eliminate such age-weighted defined
- contribution plans.
- ===========================================================
-
-
- 401K PLANS are another kind of DCP (usually set up in
- the form of a profit sharing or stock bonus plan), where
- employees are allowed to "defer" part of their compensation,
- and have it go into the profit sharing plan for their
- account. These can be excellent incentives to attract
- employees, since they enable thrifty employees to set aside
- up to $7,000 a year ($9,500 in 1996, with inflation indexing)
- of their wages in a tax-deferred qualified plan. Many
- employers will also make "matching" contributions, putting
- up, say, 50 cents for every dollar that an employee elects
- to "defer" into the 401K plan. Unfortunately, they can
- be grotesquely complex and administer (you may have to have
- as many as 6 separate types of accounts for each participant,
- typically with sub-accounts for 3 to 5 investment choices
- for each) and they must be very carefully monitored and
- administered to avoid disqualification or penalties, in
- case lower paid employees choose not to defer as high a
- percentage of their pay as the highly paid employees.
-
- Note, however, that the Small Business Job Protection Act
- of 1996 has considerably alleviated some of the complex
- problems associated with 401K plans:
-
- . For years beginning after 1996, the once formidably
- complex definition of who is a "highly-compensated
- employee" has been greatly simplified, to include only
- an employee who was a 5% owner during the current or
- the previous year, and an employee who had compensation
- of over $80,000 from the employer in the preceding
- year (and, if the employer elects, was in the top 20%
- of employees based on compensation level).
-
- . For years beginning after 1998, the non-discrimination
- "safe harbor" for 401K plans has been made much simpler
- and easier to achieve. The employer needs only to do
- one of the following: (1) Make a nonelective 3%
- contribution to the plan for each eligible participant,
- whether or not the employee makes an elective
- contribution; or (2) Match 100% of the elective
- contributions of non-highly compensated employees, up
- to 3% of pay, and matches 50% of elective contributions
- from 3% to 5% of pay, and the match rate for highly
- compensated employees is not greater than that for the
- nonhighly compensated employees.
-
- STOCK BONUS PLANS are just like profit sharing plans, for
- the most part, except that an employer can make contributions
- to a stock bonus plan even if it has no current year or prior
- accumulated profits from which to make the contribution.
- Also, a stock bonus plan is allowed to invest a large part
- of its assets in stock of the employer corporation, and
- typically, when a participant retires or dies, he or she
- (or his or her estate, if deceased) will usually receive a
- distribution of the company's stock from the plan, instead
- of just receiving cash. This can be advantageous to the
- recipient if the stock has gone up in value since it was
- bought by the plan, since the employee will only be taxed
- on the COST (to the plan) of such stock, rather than on
- its current value, if it is distributed to him or her in
- a lump sum. Any unrecognized gain on the stock will be
- deferred until the recipient later sells the stock, at
- which time the gain will be favorably treated as long-term
- capital gain.
-
- One form of stock bonus plans is the "ESOP," or Employee
- Stock Ownership Plan, where a stock bonus plan invests
- primarily or exclusively in stock of the employer
- corporation. A plan that qualifies as an ESOP is entitled
- to a wide range of special tax benefits. These are
- highly technical beasts, however, and you will need some
- high-powered accounting and legal help to set up and
- maintain one, which will usually make an ESOP feasible only
- for a relatively large firm or a very profitable smaller
- firm. However, certain "leveraged" ESOP's, where the plan
- borrows money from a bank or other lender to purchase
- stock from a major shareholder, can provide unmatched tax
- benefits, including:
-
- . The ability of the selling shareholders to "roll
- over" their gain tax-free by investing the proceeds
- in certain "qualifying securities"; and
-
- . An exclusion from income of 50% of the interest
- earned on such a loan to an ESOP by the lender,
- enabling it to offer such a loan to the plan at a
- reduced a interest rate. (Repealed by Section
- 1602 of the Small Business Job Protection Act of
- 1996, for loans made after August 20, 1996.)
-
-
- MONEY PURCHASE PENSION PLANS:
-
- The other type of DCP, the money purchase pension plan, is
- quite similar to profit sharing plans in a number of ways.
- However, there are some key differences:
-
- . The formula for contributing to the plan, which is
- usually based on employee compensation, is a FIXED
- obligation of the employer, and can range from
- nearly nothing to 25% of compensation. Unlike a
- profit sharing plan, if your money purchase pension
- plan calls for a contribution of X% of covered
- employees' compensation, your company MUST make the
- contribution each year, or else you will run afoul of
- the IRS's "minimum funding requirements" and
- tax penalties for as long as the plan remains
- "underfunded." Thus, through good times or bad
- (unless you decide to terminate the plan altogether
- or amend it to reduce the level of contributions),
- your firm must continue to put in the formula amount
- specified in the plan document, or face severe
- penalties. As such, money purchase pension plans
- are much less flexible, and thus somewhat less
- popular than, profit sharing plans.
-
- . Any forfeitures of the accounts of employees who exit
- the plan before their accounts have fully vested are
- applied to reduce the amount the employer must contribute
- to the money purchase pension plan for the year, unlike
- a profit sharing plan, where such forfeitures are
- re-allocated to the continuing participants in the
- plan. This can be a good thing in a year in which the
- employer company is strapped for cash and having a hard
- time coming up with the money to make the pension plan
- contribution; or it can be a bad thing if the company
- has the money and you want to put more money into the
- plan in order to get a larger tax deduction, but can't,
- because of significant forfeitures during the year, as
- unvested employees quit or are terminated.
-
- . One of the potential advantages of a money purchase
- pension plan over a profit sharing plan is that an
- employer can generally contribute up to 25%, rather
- than only 15%, of compensation to the money purchase
- plan. However, few employers are confident enough
- about their future that they would lock themselves
- into paying 25% of wages of their eligible employees
- into a pension plan for an indefinite period of time.
- Thus, where an employer (in the ideal situation, a
- self-employed person with few or no employees who must
- be covered by the plans) wants to try to put in the
- maximum of 25% in some years, but maintain some
- flexibility in case of a downturn in business, the
- best solution is often a combination of a 15% profit
- sharing plan and a 10% money purchase pension plan.
- With that setup, in a good year, an employer can make
- tax-deductible contributions up to the full 25% or
- $30,000 limit for each participant, but in a bad
- business year can cut back or skip the profit sharing
- contribution, and is only obligated to make the 10%
- pension plan contribution, which is not nearly as
- heavy an obligation as if a single 25% money purchase
- pension plan had been set up.
-
- Many professional corporation and Keogh plans are set
- up as a combination of a 15% profit sharing plan and a
- 10% money purchase pension plan. Often if there are
- employees other than the owners, the money purchase
- pension plan is "integrated" with Social Security, so
- that instead of contributing a flat 10% of wages to
- it, the contribution can be based on 4.3% of wages up
- to a given level (as high as $62,700 of wages per
- participant), and 10% only on the excess, taking full
- advantage of the 5.7% differential allowed when a plan
- is "integerated" with Social Security. This shifts a
- higher contribution percentage to the highly paid
- employees, and also reduces the amount of the annual
- fixed commitment to be contributed to the pension plan.
-
- . As previously noted, a money purchase pension plan is
- a DCP, and unlike a DBP, you do not need to hire an
- actuary to determine the amount that must be contributed
- to the plan each year, or to do the "actuarial
- certification" that must be filed with the plan's
- annual report to the IRS each year. This is a major
- cost savings vs. a defined benefit plan (DBP). However,
- as expensive and complex as they are to administer,
- DBP's have a couple of major benefits over money purchase
- pension plans, including (a) the ability of an owner to
- make much, much, larger deductible contributions to a
- DBP, and (b) the advantage of a DBP to an owner who is
- older than most of his or her employees, since, for
- example, there are only 10 years until age 65 retirement
- in which to build up a retirement fund for the
- 55-year-old owner, rather than 40 years to do so for
- a 25-year-old employee. Thus, even if the 25-year-old
- makes as much as you, the owner, do, the amount that
- can be contributed to the DBP on your behalf as a
- 55-year-old will be many times larger than the amount
- that can be contributed for the 25-year-old.
-
- Fortunately, there is a special kind of money purchase
- plan, not widely used, called a "TARGET BENEFIT PLAN,"
- where a contribution formula is set up, based on the
- number of years till retirement age for each participant.
- The effect is very similar to a DBP, except that
- individual accounts are maintained for each participant,
- and the amount that will be paid out at retirement age
- is only a "target" amount, based on some advance
- assumptions about whether the invested funds will earn
- 6% or 10% or whatever, over the period of participation
- in the plan. Unlike a DBP, the annual contribution
- to a target benefit plan does not have to be actuarially
- adjusted to take into account changing investment
- results, unexpected levels of forfeitures, or the like.
- In a target benefit plan, the recipient simply gets
- what his or her account has grown (or shrunk) to by the
- time of retirement, rather than some guaranteed or
- "defined benefit" amount, under a DBP. Thus, a target
- benefit plan can also make a lot of sense to you as an
- employer if you are a lot older than most of your
- employees, since your greater age will skew most of
- the contribution towards funding your pension, and
- much smaller amounts for your younger employees.
-
- However, the one major drawback of a target benefit
- plan, as compared to a DBP, is that it is a DCP and,
- therefore, is still subject to the 25% of compensation
- or $30,000 annual contribution limit, whereas a
- 55-year-old participant in a DBP, earning over $100,000
- a year, may well be able to generate a contribution
- of about $100,000 (or even more) per year to fund
- his or her pension under a DBP plan. If you are over
- 50 years old and are making serious money, and want
- to sock away as much as you can into a pension plan,
- you will probably want to set up a DBP (discussed
- below), not a target benefit plan.
-
-
- DEFINED BENEFIT PLANS
- ---------------------
-
- Defined benefit pension plans (DBP's), are usually the
- most complex and expensive to administer of all retirement
- plans, with the possible exceptions of ESOP's. However,
- if you want to maximize your tax deductions to a retirement
- plan, and if you want the maximum skewing of benefits under
- a plan to highly-compensated participants (like you) in a
- plan that includes employees, a DBP is also the best tool
- available in many cases, although, as discussed above, a
- "target benefit plan" can be an excellent, and less complex,
- alternative, if you don't need to contribute beyond the
- 25% of compensation / $30,000 a year limits that apply
- to DCP's, including target benefit plans.
-
- As the name implies, in a defined benefit plan, it is the
- retirement BENEFIT that is defined by the plan, and not
- the annual contribution to the plan. Thus, a DBP will
- never say that the employer is to contribute "X% of each
- employee's annual compensation." Instead, it will say
- that, at retirement age (typically 65), each participant
- who has worked the requisite number of years will receive
- a pension equal to some percentage of his pay. Thus, if
- employee Y makes $35,000 a year now, is 32 years old, and
- is expected have wage increases of 3% a year, has a 60%
- chance of quitting before his pension benefit is fully
- vested, and the plan's investments until Y retires are
- expected to grow at 8% a year, an "actuary" takes all
- these and a host of other factors into account, does a lot
- of higher mathematics and number-crunching, and comes up
- with an "actuarially determined" amount that can or must
- be contributed to the plan in the current year for that
- employee, so that there will be enough money when Y retires
- at age 65 to pay Y an annuity (pension) for his or her
- remaining life expectancy of 15 years or so, at an amount
- equal to, say 100% of Y's average annual salary for the
- 3 best earning years of his or her working career with the
- company.
-
- The maximum annual benefit that can be paid under a defined
- benefit plan is currently (1996) $120,000, an amount that
- is indexed and increases each year with inflation.
-
- As you may have already guessed, these kinds of calculations
- are unbelievably complex, and the people (called "enrolled
- actuaries") who perform them and who certify to the IRS each
- year that you have contributed the proper amount to your
- DBP plan, command some very hefty fees. Thus, even a
- relatively simple one-person DBP plan can expect to pay
- several thousand dollars a year in actuarial and other
- ERISA compliance fees to actuaries, accountants, and other
- professionals.
-
- Clearly, incurring such large administrative expenses for
- a pension plan are only worth the trouble if there are
- very good reasons for setting up a DBP plan, such as a
- powerful desire to maximize your deductible retirement
- plan contributions.
-
- Note also, that many defined benefit plans are not only
- regulated by the IRS and Department of Labor, but are also
- under the thumb of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation
- ("PBGC"), which requires that employers who maintain DBP
- plans (with certain exemptions for small plans and insured
- plans) pay hefty annual insurance premiums to the PBGC,
- based on the number of participants in the plan. This
- insurance is supposedly to be used to pay off employees of
- companies that go broke without first having adequately
- funded their defined benefit pension plans, in order to
- insure that the employees get something like the pensions
- they had been been promised by their deadbeat and defunct
- employers. Unfortunately, like other government insurance
- schemes, such as the FSLIC and the FDIC for S&L's and
- banks, the PBGC is already virtually bankrupt and rapidly
- raising the insurance fees it charges solvent employee
- pension plans, to help bail some of the giant corporate
- pension plans that have already gone belly up. The annual
- per-employee premium, only 50 cents per employee initially,
- is already up several THOUSAND percent since the PBGC was
- created by Congress in 1974, and is probably going to
- ascend straight into the stratosphere in coming years.
-
- As noted above, a DBP has some major advantages over most
- other kinds of retirement plans:
-
- . Maximize contribution deductions. In many cases,
- for an older individual who establishes a corporate
- or "Keogh" DBP, the annual deduction can be as much
- as 100% of annual compensation or over $100,000 per
- year (as determined by an Enrolled Actuary).
-
- . The ability to heavily skew contributions in favor
- of older employees, simply because there are fewer
- years in which to build up a pension fund for an
- older employee (like the owner) until he or she hits
- retirement age, than for a younger employee.
-
- The chief disadvantages of a DBP are:
-
- . Costs of administering can be several times the cost
- of administering other qualified plans, mainly because
- of the need to retain an enrolled actuary to do the
- required actuarial certifications.
-
- . Complex and difficult for a layman (or for a lawyer or
- a CPA or a benefit consultant who isn't an actuary, for
- that matter) to understand. Part of the complexity
- is due to the need to compute and make quarterly
- contributions to the plan, or else face penalties if
- the contributions are late or are too small.
-
- . Some DBP's are required to make insurance premium
- payments to the PBGC, which can be another significant
- expense.
-
- . Like a DCP pension plan (but not a profit sharing plan),
- the employer is required to continue to fund a DBP plan
- at a specified level, although the annual amount is hard
- to predict in advance, since it depends on so many
- complex factors. (It may even be zero in some years,
- if the plan becomes significantly OVERfunded.)
-
- . The employer is, in effect, guaranteeing that the
- pension fund will earn a certain rate of return on its
- investments over time. If the trustee of the pension
- fund makes bad investments, or falls short of the
- expected rate of return, the company must pony up the
- difference, in order to keep the total pension fund
- growing at the required rate. (On the other hand, if
- investment returns exceed expectations, that can
- significantly reduce the amount the employer must
- contribute to the plan.)
-
- . Where there are a number of rank and file employees,
- the assets of a DBP plan are usually commingled in
- one large fund for investment, without separate
- accounts for the individual participants, so that it
- is usually not feasible for the participants to manage
- their own accounts. This brings into play the
- "fiduciary" and "prudence" requirements of ERISA,
- which, put in simplest terms, means that you or whomever
- you hire to manage the pension fund is going to need
- to be very competent and careful about not making
- "imprudent" investments. Since hindsight is always
- 20-20, the "fiduciaries" of the plan, which include the
- employer, can expect to be sued if any investments of
- the plan go bad -- even if the plan's overall investment
- performance is outstanding. ERISA holds anyone who
- directly or indirectly controls the management of a
- pension plan's funds to a very strict standard, and
- makes it easy for disgruntled participants to sue.
-
-
- FULLY INSURED DEFINED BENEFIT PLANS:
-
- A rather obscure section of the tax code allows some
- special tax breaks to certain DBP's that invest all of
- their assets in "level premium" insurance contracts, where
- an insurance company agrees, that for a fixed annual premium
- payment from the employer, it will provide a given level
- of pension income to each participant in the plan at the
- specified retirement age.
-
- For a small firm that wants a defined benefit plan, and
- is also willing to forego the right of participants to
- borrow from the plan, such an insured plan can be the way
- to go.
-
- Advantages include the following, as compared to uninsured
- DBP's:
-
- . The company is relieved of the requirement of computing
- and making quarterly contributions to the plan.
-
- . While regular DBP's can easily become overfunded,
- resulting in a hefty (20% to 50%) excise tax on the
- excess funding if the plan is terminated and the excess
- assets revert to the employer, the nature of insured
- plans is such that they are unlikely to ever become
- overfunded.
-
- . While the IRS can (and does, frequently) attack the
- actuarial assumptions used for regular DBP's (such as
- the mortality rate for participants, the amount that
- can be earned on investments, etc.), there is little
- to quibble about where the insurance contract spells
- out exactly what the costs are and what the retirement
- benefits to be paid by the insurance company will be.
-
- . A fully insured DBP isn't required to file an actuarial
- report (Schedule B of Form 5500), so it is not necessary
- to hire an actuary to certify that the plan is being
- properly funded each year.
-
- . Annual costs of funding an insured plan fluctuate much
- less than with other DBP's, so that cash flow planning
- by an employer is much easier to do.
-
- . And, finally, while DBP's have generally fallen very
- much into disfavor for small firms, except where the
- owner is about 55 or older, an insured DBP is an
- excellent and somewhat less complex alternative, and
- will often allow even larger contributions to be made
- than a regular, uninsured DBP that provides the same
- level of retirement benefits.
-
-
- COMBINATIONS OF PLANS -- LIMIT ON CONTRIBUTIONS
- -----------------------------------------------
-
- Nothing prevents you from setting both a defined benefit
- plan and a defined contribution plan. You might think this
- would allow you to contribute up to the maxiumum $30,000 a
- year for the defined contribution plan and contribute the
- full actuarially allowable amount for the the defined
- benefit plan. However, that is not the case, under present
- law. If you have one of each kind of plan, a complex
- formula must be used to compute a reduced limitation under
- each plan. However, note that the Small Business Job
- Protection Act of 1996 will eliminate this overall limit
- for plan years beginning after 1999. That means you would
- be able to get a full contribution, up to the annual limit,
- for both a defined contribution and a defined benefit plan
- in the year 2000 or later. After that date, if you are
- bumping up against the annual contribution limitation, you
- may want to consider setting up another plan of the other
- type.
-
- ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ WARNING ABOUT QUALIFIED PLANS AND IRA'S, GENERALLY: │
- └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- Even if you do everything else right, be aware that Congress
- has in recent years enacted excise taxes on retirement plan
- benefits, which come into play if you are TOO successful in
- building up a nest egg. While these excise tax rules get
- too complex to detail here, suffice it to say that if you
- build up such a nice pension fund for yourself that you
- either receive an annual benefit of over $150,000
- (approximately) or a lump sum of 5 times that amount,
- you will be subject to a 15% excise tax on the excess
- amount (in addition to income tax) when you receive it.
- Or, if you die before you withdraw all your benefits from
- the retirement plan, your estate will have to pay a 15%
- excise tax on the lump sum amount to the extent it exceeds
- $750,000 (approximately). Nothing is certain but death and
- taxes. Especially the latter.
-
- Also, during your lifetime, if you take money out of your
- IRA or other retirement plan prior to reaching age 59 1/2,
- you will usually be subject to a 10% federal penalty on the
- amount you take out. Some state also impose a similar, but
- lesser penalty, such as California, which imposes a 2 1/2%
- penalty, for example. After age 59 1/2, if you take out TOO
- MUCH a year (over $155,000 at present), you get hit by the
- 15% excise tax on the excess amount. Or, if you withdraw
- TOO LITTLE from your retirement plan each year after you
- reach age 70 1/2, the IRS will hit you with a 50% penalty
- tax on the amount you should have withdrawn, but didn't.
-
- In short, unless you do everything exactly right, or even
- if you do and you are too successful in building up your
- pension assets, the IRS will be biting and nipping at you
- from every direction, sort of like being nibbled to death
- by a thousand ducks.
-
- NOTE: Congress has temporarily, for the three years 1997,
- 1998, and 1999, suspended the 15% excise tax on distributions
- of over $155,000 a year. Thus, this may be a good time to
- raid your pension piggy bank, if you have qualified plans
- or IRAs with "too much" money in them, even though you will
- still have to pay regular income tax on the distributions
- (and perhaps the 10% penalty tax if you are under the age
- of 59 1/2).
-
- Even so, qualified retirement plans are still the last,
- best game in town, when it comes to sheltering significant
- portions of your earned income. If you wanna play, you
- gotta pay, as the saying goes....
-
-
- NONQUALIFIED RETIREMENT PLANS
- -----------------------------
-
- There is another whole breed of pension and profit sharing
- plans you may not have heard of -- the nonqualified plan.
-
- These can be as simple as the employee cash bonus profit
- sharing plan, where the employer merely pays, as an
- incentive to motivate its employees, a bonus to some or
- all employees once or more a year, based on the level of
- company profits for the year, quarter, etc. With such a
- plan, there is no "trust" to be set up to hold the money,
- no fund to invest, or any of the other trappings of a
- qualified profit sharing plan. Instead, the employer
- merely establishes a formula for sharing some of its
- profits with employees, announces it to the workers, and
- writes checks to them (assuming profits reach a specified
- level) at the end of the year, or quarter, or whenever.
-
- A nonqualified pension plan is also generally much simpler
- to set up and administer than a qualified one, and, unlike
- a qualified plan, you don't need to submit it to the IRS
- for a ruling (a "determination letter") that blesses the tax
- qualification of the plan. (Obviously, since the plan is
- not "qualified.")
-
- Companies that want to set up 401K plans for their employees
- often find that they are dangerous and tricky to administer,
- because the rank-and-file employees must contribute enough
- to the 401K each year, in comparison to the highly compensated
- employees, that the plan is not considered "discriminatory"
- by the IRS. One popular way around this is to exclude the
- "top hat" employees and officers from the 401K plan, and
- instead set up a nonqualified plan on the side for such
- highly compensated employees, which makes it much simpler
- to keep the 401K plan on the right side of the law.
-
- While nonqualified plans come in many shapes and flavors,
- some with trustees and investment funds similar to those
- of qualified pension plans, others being a simple written
- promise of the employer to pay the employee a certain
- amount of retirement income if he or she works until an
- agreed-upon retirement age and keeps his or her nose clean
- (and if the employer is still solvent). Because they are
- not subject to hardly any IRS or Department of Labor
- scrutiny and oversight, nonqualified plans can be far more
- selective and flexible in their design than qualified plans.
-
- For example, a nonqualified plan can be set up to pay
- benefits only to top management employees, something you
- could never get away with in a qualified retirement plan.
- Also, the employer does not necessarily have to "fund" the
- plan by setting aside money each year in a trust for the
- plan participants (although it may).
-
- Thus, while nonqualified plans can be very useful for
- creating an attractive benefits package for a limited and
- selected group of employees or managers, keep in mind the
- fact that they lack certain key benefits of "qualified"
- plans, mainly the following:
-
- . The employer typically doesn't get a current pension
- plan deduction, unless it puts aside money that is
- currently taxable to the recipient employee. (Whereas,
- in a qualified plan, an employer deducts money it puts
- in trust for an employee in 1995, but the employee may
- not have to pay tax on that money until he or she
- retires in the year 2035. A pretty nice little tax
- deferral, you might say....)
-
- . Or, if the employer DOES get a deduction by putting
- money in a nonqualified pension trust for employees,
- the benefits will become taxable as soon as "vested"
- on the employee's behalf, even though the employee has
- no access to the pension money in his or her retirement
- account until retirement date.
-
- . Also, if a nonqualified trust is set up, the investment
- income it earns is NOT tax-exempt, unlike the trust
- fund of a qualified retirement plan. Thus, all the
- dividends, interest, etc., earned on the trust fund will
- be immediately taxable, either to the employer, to the
- employee, or to the trust itself, as an entity, depending
- on how the trust and plan are structured.
-
- . Finally, there are no special tax benefits, such
- as 5-year income averaging or deferral of gain on
- appreciated employer stock received by a pension recipient,
- under a nonqualified plan.
-
- In short, nonqualified plans can be very useful and flexible
- for compensating key employees, and are relatively free from
- government regulation, but the cost you must be willing to
- pay if setting up such a plan is the loss of a number of
- very attractive tax benefits that are only available to
- tax-qualified retirement plans.
-