A study from the AARP Public Policy Institute provides insights into employment barriers for people of retirement age.
Research shows that many older workers plan to stay at work or enter new careers in retirement for financial reasons, to keep benefits or to stay engaged. In the AARP survey, 14% indicated a major barrier to employment was that benefits were not adequate at jobs they were pursuing, and 16% indicated they were not physically able to perform job duties.
Nearly half (48%) of the re-employed said they were earning less on their current jobs than the job they had before. Among the re-employed, half were earning less because they were being paid less, 10% were working fewer hours, and 39% gave both as reasons.
The survey focused on individuals ages 55 to 70 who sought new jobs after a period of unemployment. More than one-quarter (26%) said employers thinking they were too old was a major barrier in finding employment.
Seventeen percent said employers think they are overqualified, and 12% said their skills were not suitable for the jobs they were pursuing. The AARP survey report notes that those seeking jobs in a new field may have to settle for entry-level jobs and lower pay because they do not have the experience in their new career path.
Universal availability – The report says a
review of the universal availability rules and history provides a backdrop for
a discussion of the key areas that need “soft” guidance and/or expanded
outreach programs.
“Orphan” 403(b) contracts – Unlike the majority
of qualified plans, 403(b) participants held individual contracts which, prior
to the issuance of the 403(b) final regulations, may have been placed with any
number of vendors. If these participants severed their employment prior to 2009
and no additional contributions were made to the plan account after that time,
based on guidance from the IRS, a plan sponsor need not list these contracts in
its plan. The report says the impact on the rest of the 403(b) plan should
these “orphan” plans fail to comply with the Internal Revenue Code requires
clarification.
Minimizing contract leakage – The lack of
ownership taken by certain 403(b) plan sponsors seeking to avoid the “fiduciary” moniker has led to a challenge for vendors when faced with a
withdrawal request from a participant. Providing guidance to vendors that would
allow them to take certain actions would help to preserve retirement assets.
403(b) plan terminations – Given the many
practical problems that are a by-product of the nature of the 403(b) structure,
additional guidance is needed to address the more technical issues. However,
there are opportunities for the IRS to supply assistance through expansion of
the online tools that are already available that cover termination issues, the
committee says.
Employee Plan Compliance Resolution System
(EPCRS) improvements – In light of the many firsts experienced by the 403(b)
community in the past decade, including the upcoming restatement onto new
pre-approved documents, there is a need to update EPCRS to encourage use of the
program and compliance with the Internal Revenue Code. Possible improvements
discussed include allowing certain loan failures to be self-corrected,
broadening the use of the Department of Labor (DOL) online calculator, creating
additional application schedules for 403(b) issues and discounted fees.
NEXT: Universal availability issues.
The ACT fielded surveys of 403(b) plan sponsors and
providers, and more than half of the respondents identified compliance with the
universal availability rule as the most significant operation issue that they
face.
The survey found there is much confusion about how the
eligibility exceptions apply to workers who do not exactly fit the permissible
exception to the universal availability rule. For example, employers often
exclude from participation in the plan student workers who continue to work
over the summer (and thus, reach the 1,000 hours threshold). There is confusion
about the application of the 20 hours per week and 1,000 hours rules and how to
deal with temporary employees.
Survey respondents identified other universal availability
issues, including:
The
inability to exclude certain other generally non-benefits eligible
employees, specifically part-time faculty under the 403(b) plan;
Universal
availability for non-Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
plans, especially for employees whose hours are not tracked, but usually
work less than 20 hours per week (e.g., adjunct faculty); and
The
lack of detailed information with ample examples regarding excluded
employees and the 20 hours per week and 1,000 hours rules with an
explanation about what happens when employees exceed those hour limits.
The ACT report recommends the IRS consider providing
additional educational outreach, in more detail, on at least the following
issues in order to assuage continuing plan sponsor uncertainty, confusion and
ignorance about the application of the universal availability rule and
resultant noncompliance:
Treatment
of adjunct faculty at universities;
Treatment
of part-time, seasonal and temporary employees;
Providing
some type of relief from the tracking of hours burden for tax-exempt
employers (which frequently have very limited budgets and few staff);
The
meaning of the phraseology “reasonably anticipate” in terms of the 1,000
hours threshold; and
How
the less than 20 hours per week standard is meant to apply. For
example: Can employees who work less than 20 hours per week, who could be
tested separately under Code Section 410 coverage rules because they do
not meet the minimum age and service requirements, be permitted to make
salary reduction contributions even in the absence of a specific reference
to Code Section 410 in the portion of the 403(b) final regulations
addressing the exclusion of employees who work less than 20 hours per week
from the universal availability rule?
NEXT: “Orphan” contracts.
In response to the 403(b) plan survey, a number of
respondents commented that there continues to be considerable confusion and
uncertainty as to what are a 403(b) plan sponsor’s obligations regarding
“orphan” contracts. This concern was also expressed by members of the 403(b)
vendor community with whom the committee had separate discussions about 403(b)
plans.
Rev. Proc. 2007-71 addressed
the treatment of two types of orphan contracts, for plan document compliance
purposes:
The
vendor for a pre-2009 contract held by a former employee need not be
listed in the plan document (and the contract is not subject to the
information sharing requirements) if no contributions are made to the
contract after 2008; and
Employee
contracts issued from 2005 to 2008 can be excluded from listing in the
plan document (and not be subject to the information-sharing obligations)
if no contributions are made after 2008 and reasonable, good faith efforts
to otherwise “include” such contracts as part of the plan (presumably for
operational purposes) are
made.
According to the ACT report, while the guidance did not
address pre-2005 contracts to which no contributions have been made since 2004,
the general assumption has been that such contracts are also not subject to
plan document compliance (and the information-sharing rules) where
contributions have not been made to the contract after 2004 (sometimes called
“grandfathered” contracts).
The committee recommends the IRS consider issuing guidance
that clarifies:
The
impact of operational violations under an individual’s orphan contract on
any other contracts that the individual may have with the same employer;
and
How
pre-2009 frozen contracts issued to current employees before 2005 should
be handled for compliance purposes.
NEXT: Plan leakage and “lost” contracts.
Concerns have been raised with the committee regarding the
unnecessary leakage in several respects under orphan and other contracts.
First, given the lack of guidance as to what can be done when there is no
longer an employer (or where the employer has no legal involvement), it has
been observed that often the only distribution option vendors are willing to
make available to the contract holder is a total distribution. In these
circumstances, many vendors are apparently unwilling to allow loans, partial
withdrawals or transfers/rollovers to another 403(b) contract to the extent
employer approval is required.
Second, respondents to the ACT’s survey, as well as members
of the 403(b) vendor community with whom it had separate discussions, expressed
concerns that orphan and other older annuity contracts are going unclaimed or
otherwise getting lost. What they are seeing is that contract issuers are often
not making sufficient efforts to keep in contact with the contract holders,
resulting in “lost” contracts.
The committee was told this is happening because there is no
clear-cut obligation for issuers of old fixed annuity contracts to maintain
current, or otherwise find, information/records regarding the holders of these
contracts.
The report makes the following recommendations:
Greater
certainty is needed as to what the vendor can do under a contract in terms
of withdrawal and distribution where there is no employer involvement.
Therefore, the committee recommends that the IRS consider issuing guidance
that clarifies that the vendor can act as the decision-maker (in lieu of
the employer) for rollover and other withdrawal/distribution purposes
under contracts where the employer no longer exists (or is no longer
legally involved).
The
committee says it is of the view that issuers should generally be required
to do more to ensure that orphan annuity contracts do not go unclaimed.
Required minimum distribution (RMD) rules could, in the committee’s view,
provide a potential avenue for the IRS to encourage this. While
recognizing that the regulations generally provide that the required RMD
for one contract can be made from another contract held by the individual,
it nevertheless believes the IRS could issue guidance that requires
issuers to provide reasonable advance notice to contract holders on the
RMD requirements, and if the issuer does not have current contact
information, make reasonable efforts to locate the contract holder.
NEXT: Terminating plans with individual
custodial accounts.
Survey respondents repeatedly mentioned there are problems
terminating 403(b) plans with custodial accounts. The IRS has taken the
position that annuity
contracts could be distributed to a participant without the
participant’s consent; whereas a custodial account not be distributed
similarly. If a participant refuses to take a distribution, or cannot be found
to take a distribution, the custodial account remains in the plan. The report says
the absence of a practical solution for terminating 403(b) plans that includes
custodial accounts is causing 403(b) plan sponsors additional legal and
operational costs and the need to follow questionable solutions.
The ACT says the IRS should explore with Chief Counsel
whether it has legal authority to create good faith or de minimis rules or
provide other solutions to address the practical problems of terminating a
403(b) plan. If the IRS does not have legal authority to solve the practical
problems, Treasury should seek legislation addressing the problems or giving
the IRS authority to address the problems in guidance.
Regardless of the results of that recommendation, the ACT
says the IRS should expand its web page with information about terminating a
403(b) plan. The current web page explains how to terminate a 403(b) plan but
does not recognize or address the many practical problems sponsors and
practitioners face when they actually try to do a termination. The IRS’s
revised web page should identify these issues and suggest possible
solutions.
In addition, the report recommends the 403(b) Fix-It Guide should be expanded to
address appropriate corrections for situations where termination distributions
have been made and rolled over, only to see the termination fail because all
assets cannot be distributed.
NEXT: EPCRS improvements.
The IRS has made changes to its Employee
Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS) to allow 403(b) plans to correct
certain errors. But the ACT makes recommendations for further improvements to
the EPCRS.
The report recommends the IRS allow certain participant loan
errors to be self-corrected. Currently, the IRS’s self-correction program (SCP)
does not permit the self-correction of errors involving participant loan
transactions of any sort. Such errors can only be corrected through the
voluntary correction program (VCP) or Audit CAP (closing agreement
program).
The committee notes there are several complexities specific
to participant loan error issues faced by 403(b) plans that enhance the
importance of devising a self-correction option. In a typical 403(b) plan
scenario, the assets may be scattered among multiple vendors with each
participant having an individual account. It is also a frequent scenario that
plan sponsors discover a participant loan error with one vendor and then a few
months later find another participant loan error with another vendor. This
creates a perpetual cycle, and excessive costs, of having to file through VCP
for these types of corrections.
Another unique quality of the 403(b) plan sponsor that
drives the recommendation to allow participant loan failures to be corrected
through SCP is embedded in the structure of 403(b) arrangements. Many 403(b)
plans are not subject to ERISA. These types of 403(b) plan sponsors are very
careful not to engage in activities that might result in it being subject to
ERISA and its fiduciary rules. One such activity that they fear would trigger
this is the policing of participant loans and, if they ultimately become
delinquent, the filing of a VCP application. So, the report says, while there
may be an important public policy goal of having loan failures corrected, the
plan sponsor, which is the entity that is in the best position to take the
steps toward that goal, has a competing interest that prevents it from doing
so.
Another specific class of issues deals with problems that
403(b) plan sponsors experience with vendors who are uncooperative or
unresponsive to efforts to correct errors reaching across multiple contracts or
individual contracts that do not recognize the role of the plan sponsor. Many
of these contracts are written as agreements between the service provider and
the participant, which the employer agrees to facilitate through its payroll
system. There is no provision for the administration of plan-wide matters by
the employer. In other cases, with many legacy contracts or arrangements, the
terms do not facilitate the fix that is prescribed by EPCRS for the “plan” and
the employer doesn’t have the ability to force the account holder (participant)
to take the actions necessary to bring the contract into plan-level
compliance.
Among other recommendations, the ACT recommends the IRS
develop additional schedules for the VCP filing to allow for correction of the
most common 403(b) operational failures. For example, the IRS should
develop a schedule specifically addressing a universal availability failure
with clear instructions about the correction options (similar to Schedule 5 and
the loan corrections).
The report also recommends the IRS implement a document
amnesty program for any 403(b) plan sponsor that adopts a pre-approved plan so
that no correction of prior documents is required and reduce the filing fees
for the 403(b) community, if only for a reasonable period of time, to allow
compliance errors in the remedial amendment period to be discovered and
corrected.