The webcast series will help employers and service providers
understand how the fiduciary responsibility provisions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) apply to employer-sponsored retirement
and health plans, and provide information about how to avoid common problems in
managing a plan.
Specifically, the series will cover understanding your plan
and your responsibilities, carefully selecting and monitoring service
providers, making contributions on time, providing appropriate disclosures to
plan participants, filing annual reports to the government on time, and
avoiding prohibited transactions.
The webcast series is being presented in three sessions.
Attendees can register for all sessions or for individual sessions. During the
webcasts, speakers from the U.S. Department of Labor will discuss the following
information:
March 19 – Basic fiduciary responsibilities when operating
an employer-sponsored retirement plan and ERISA’s prohibited transactions
provisions and exemptions.
March 20 – ERISA’s reporting and disclosure provisions for
employer-sponsored retirement plans and the Department of Labor’s voluntary
correction programs for retirement plans.
March 26 – Basic fiduciary responsibilities when operating
an employer-sponsored group health plan, ERISA’s reporting and disclosure
provisions, and Qualified Medical Child Support Orders (QMCSOs). This
webcast will not cover the Affordable Care Act.
Small plans must be given more latitude to mimic their larger counterparts if the nation is to adequately fund its retirement needs, says Kristi Mitchem, of State Street Global Advisors.
Mitchem, an executive vice president at State Street Global
Advisors (SSgA), made that argument recently before the U.S. Senate
Subcommittee on Economic Policy, which falls under the wider Senate Committee
on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. During her testimony, Mitchem
highlighted the success that the largest corporate employers have had in
helping their workers achieve retirement income adequacy, as well as ways in
which regulators and industry leaders can make success more universal.
Mitchem pushed lawmakers and regulators to remove barriers
that may prevent smaller companies from offering the well-structured,
well-funded retirement savings programs prevalent among large U.S.
corporations. She said the defined contribution (DC) plans of the largest
corporate employers have done a much better job than smaller employers to help
fill the gap left by closed and frozen defined benefit (DB) plans, upon which many
Americans historically relied to fund their retirement.
The upshot of Mitchem’s presentation was that “the great
divide” in retirement readiness is involved more with employer size than
employee income level. That’s because large employers are much more likely to
provide a retirement plan, and when they do, the plan produces better results
for those employees that participate in it. During her presentation, Mitchem compared
government data from large and small plans across a number of dimensions to
illustrate the impact of employer size on retirement readiness:
Access:
Nearly nine in 10 (89%) large companies offer DC plans, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, while just 14% of small businesses sponsor some type
of plan for their employees to save for retirement in a tax-advantaged
environment.
Participant
Rate: the average employee participation rate in the largest plan segments
is close to 80%. For the smallest companies that offer a plan, participant
rates dip to an average of about 74%.
Savings
Rates: In the largest plans, the average employee savings rate is 7.3% of
salary, while for the smallest plans it is 5.6%.
Account
Balances: The average account balance in the largest plans is about two
times the average across all plan sizes—at $140,000 compared to about $64,000.
Mitchem explained that the advantage large plans have over
small plans usually boils down to the inclusion of automatic enrollment and
contribution escalation features, as well as the benefit of economies of scale
on investment fees and administration costs. She pointed to a recent analysis
from the Employee Benefits Research Institute (EBRI), which shows that 85% to
90% of younger middle-class workers who consistently participate in retirement plans
with automatic features during their working lifetime can expect to replace at
least 80% of income in retirement.Many
experts point to between a 70% and 80% income-replacement level as a
“successful retirement.”
Mitchem admitted that the analysis includes some potentially
problematic assumptions about Social Security eligibility and payments staying
the same despite major funding challenges facing the federal safety-net
program, but she said the point still holds about auto-features dramatically
improving outcomes. And, she says, there’s no denying larger plans have been
better at including these features.
Additionally, larger plans are more likely to offer
more aggressive and diversified investments as the default investment
option, Mitchem said, which contributes significantly to employees’
retirement success. Large plans also tend to offer participants a more
streamlined and simplified menu of investment choices to help participants make
better decisions, she said, as well as robust access to online planning tools and engagement features like mobile applications and income-need calculators.
Mitchem frequently cited the PLANSPONSOR 2013 Defined
Contribution Survey during her presentation. The research shows the occurrence
of auto-enrollment is more than twice as prevalent in the mega plans category (61.4%
for plans $1B+ in assets) when compared with micro plans (23.4% for plans with
less than $5M in assets), increasing quickly as one looks across larger and
larger subsets of plans. One of the biggest divides between large and small
plans comes in comparing the occurrence of automatic escalation features, which
hovers at about 12% for micro plans and 54% for mega plans (see “What
That 1% Increase Can Do for Participants”).
Mitchem
pointed out that the micro plans are also eating more of the average
participants’ investment returns in the form of fees and administrative
expenses. So while 45.3% of mega plans are able to achieve an average expense
ratio between 0.25% and 0.50% (25-50 bps), only about 10.6% of micro plans can
deliver this low expense target. Large plans (at $200M to $1B in AUM) can do
this about 32% of the time. The small plan category ($5M to $50M) hits the
low-expense benchmark 14.9% of the time and mid-market plans ($50M to $200M) do
so 19.6% of the time.
Mitchem said these results beg the question, “How do we
translate the successful evolution of DC plans sponsored by large employers
into success in the small employer market?”
Her first piece of advice is for federal lawmakers and
regulators to help remove the obstacles that can make plan sponsorship more
challenging for small employers. Unlike large employers, small businesses often
don’t have the time, resources or expertise to efficiently administer a
retirement plan, she said, so they benefit from being able to merge their plans when circumstances permit.
One potential solution Mitchem floated would be to expand
the multiple-employer plan (MEP) system through a new, federally supported
industry group or other association. That could make small employers more
likely to adopt some sort of retirement savings plan option, and could
have the added benefit of merging many small plans into a single, larger plan
that can be run more efficiently and secure the best share classes and lowest
investment fees for participants.
Mitchem
recommended that the current Department of Labor (DOL) nexus requirement be
eliminated for participant-funded retirement programs, and that a safe harbor
be offered to sponsors of multiple-employer DC plans, provided
that certain best-in-class plan design features are incorporated. Such
“well-structured MEPs” should also mimic the largest plans in the U.S. by being
required to leverage automation and simplification to drive better
participant outcomes, she said.
Mitchem said that in SSgA’s view, the features required for safe harbor
coverage of MEPs should include the following:
Auto-enrollment starting at a minimum of 6% with
default into an indexed target-date fund (TDF);
Automatic contribution rate escalation at a
minimum of 1% annually, up to a cap of 15%;
A simplified investment menu including an index TDF,
a limited number of core options and a lifetime income option to help manage
longevity risk;
A loan program available only for hardship to
prevent plan leakage;
A total plan expense ratio under a certain limit
based on the size of the MEP; and
An optional employer match or discretionary
profit-sharing type contribution.
Mitchem urged the removal
of testing and reporting requirements for employers under a certain size,
either inside or outside MEPs. Also important, she argued, is acceptance of
aggregated 5500-type reporting with a breakdown of contribution amounts by
participating employers, as well as alterations to the tax code to prevent
disqualification of an entire MEP in the case of a violation by one (or more)
participating members.
“We
believe granting small businesses the ability to participate in simplified MEPs
would send an important signal to the retirement market,” Mitchem said. “This
change would inspire DC plan service providers and investment managers to
create more products tailored to small businesses, providing a broader range of
choices and greater economies of scale to an underserved market segment.”