Nearly eight in 10 (78%) workers feel personally responsible for retirement savings, according to the LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute, and the percentage climbs higher among retirement plan participants.
In fact, a new LIMRA survey shows 84% of people
participating in defined contribution (DC) retirement plans feel it is their
responsibility to fund their own retirement. The survey shows that 77% of
working Americans believe all workers should have access to retirement savings
plan at work and that such plans are an effective way to save for retirement.
Six in 10 Americans agree that those who save in a DC plan specifically are
likely to achieve a secure retirement, according to LIMRA.
“It is encouraging to see that so many Americans
understand that their action or inaction during their working years can
determine their financial security in retirement,” says Alison Salka,
senior vice president and director of LIMRA research. “Systematically
saving throughout one’s career is essential for the majority of Americans to
attain their preferred retirement lifestyle once their working years come to an
end.”
Other survey results show a strong majority (85%) of DC plan
participants believe these plans are an effective way to save for retirement.
Three in 10 American workers believe their DC plan savings will represent the
primary source of retirement income. This expectation is more pronounced among
younger workers and those with access only to a DC plan. Half of DC plan
participants and nearly four in 10 plan participants under age 45 believe
savings in their DC plans will be the primary source of retirement income.
Not surprisingly, LIMRA says significantly more workers who
choose to participate in their DC retirement plan are confident that they will
realize their chosen retirement lifestyle compared with non-participating
workers (45% versus 32%).
“Our research shows that defined contribution plans
provide workers the ability to take responsibility for their retirement
security,” Salka notes. “The data suggests that workers who
participate are afforded the confidence that they will achieve their chosen
retirement lifestyle.”
These
findings are based on a nationally representative survey of 1,013 Americans
fielded in April 2014. More information on this and other LIMRA research is
available at www.secureretirementinstitute.com.
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Plan Administration for Employees That Serve in the Military
Retirement plan sponsors and advisers should become familiar with
laws covering employees who have served, or are serving, in the military to
ensure compliance with plan administration rules, says TIAA-CREF.
Rehiring any employee can present its own set of challenges
for retirement plan administration (see “Some
Rules Throw a Wrench in Rehire Administration”). But, for military service
member employees, plan sponsors also have two key pieces of legislation with
which they must comply: (1) the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment
Rights Act (USERRA); and (2) the Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act
(HEART). Not complying with these laws can can result in regulator action (see “Cook
County Pension Charged with USERRA Violations”).
USERRA is designed to protect civilian job rights and
benefits for veterans and members of reserve components. For example, USERRA
provides that returning service-members are reemployed in the job that they
would have attained had they not been absent for military service, with the
same seniority, status and pay, as well as other rights and benefits determined
by seniority.
HEART is designed to provide tax and
pension benefits to military service members who are disabled while on active
duty and to their survivors if they die on active duty. HEART requires
employers and sponsors of qualified defined benefit and defined contribution
plans, such as 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) plans to treat service members as
being reemployed by the sponsor company for purposes of entitlement. The
purpose of this is to provide service members and their survivors benefits for
which they may not otherwise have been entitled.
Ed
Moslander, senior managing director and head of institutional client services
at TIAA-CREF, tells PLANADVISER that as veterans return to work from military
service, plan sponsors need to ensure they are granted the rights and benefits
they are entitled to receive.
The New York-based Moslander explains that USERRA’s
requirements include:
ERISA
required disclosures. Plans governed by the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) must continue to provide participants in
active military service with required disclosures, such as summary plan
descriptions (SPDs), summary of material modifications (SMMs), and fee
disclosures, to name a few.
Eligibility,
vesting and benefit accruals. A plan sponsor must include a
returning employee’s time served in qualified military service in
calculating eligibility, vesting and benefit accruals. Prior vested
benefits are protected and cannot be lost, even if the employee does not
return to work.
Missed
nonelective (noncontributory) employer contributions. If the plan
sponsor made a plan nonelective (noncontributory) employer contribution
for any period during which the individual was away on qualified military
service, by the time they were rehired, the plan sponsor must make a
contribution equal to that he or she would have received if not in
qualified military service.
Missed
employee deferrals or after-tax contributions. Reemployed
participants have up to three times their period of military service that
does not exceed five years to make up employee elective deferrals (or
after-tax voluntary contributions) that could have been made during the
period of military service.
Employer
matching contributions. A plan sponsor must make up matching
contributions if a rehired service member makes up elective deferrals and
the plan provided matching contributions for the year. The matching
contribution is based on the rate that was in effect in the year for which
the employee is making up the contribution.
Earnings,
forfeitures and prior year’s tests. Employee and employer make-up
contributions are not adjusted for gains or losses that were experienced
by the plan during the USERRA service period. The individual is not
entitled to an allocation of forfeitures (i.e., plan assets surrendered by
participants upon termination prior to fully vesting) that occurred while
in military service.
Participant loans. If an employee takes a participant loan
and is called into military service while the loan is being repaid, loan
repayments may be suspended for the period of military service, but interest
will continue to accrue at a rate that does not exceed 6%.
Moslander goes on to explain that while USERRA is the
foundational legislation that governs the benefits of returning service
members, other legislation has expanded the rights of these individuals. HEART,
for example, made permanent the exemption to the 10% tax penalty on early
withdrawals for qualified reservist distributions. He adds that HEART includes
requirements to improve the benefits of participants who died or were disabled
while performing qualified military service, and it altered how differential
pay (payments made by an employer to an individual who had been called to
active duty for more than 30 days) is treated.
As to what procedures plan sponsors should follow to comply
with USERRA, HEART and any other laws protecting military service members,
Moslander says, “The first step plan sponsors can take to comply is to
familiarize themselves with the disclosure requirements and reemployment
eligibility guidelines of USERRA. When evaluating the requirements, it would
serve employers well to discuss their policies with legal counsel to ensure
that all requirements are being met or where improvements could be made.”
Moslander adds, “Plan sponsors should carefully review
existing policies to ensure they comply with USERRA’s requirements and
establish procedures that fit. Plan sponsors can be a guiding voice for
employees that are navigating USERRA’s potentially intricate requirements.”
He
adds that using resources from the federal government can offer helpful
information that could be of assistance to those organizations that employ
service men and women. TIAA-CREF offers a fact sheet about USERRA and HEART,
which can be found here.
More information about USERRA from the DOL can be found here. More
information about HEART can be found here.