As you’ve probably heard, a new law was recently passed with a
wide range of retirement plan changes for employers and individuals. One of the
provisions of the SECURE Act involves a new requirement for employers that
sponsor tax-favored defined contribution retirement plans that are subject to
ERISA.
Specifically, the law will require that the benefit statements
sent to plan participants include a lifetime income disclosure at least once
during any 12-month period. The disclosure will need to illustrate the monthly
payments that an employee would receive if the total account balance were used
to provide lifetime income streams, including a single life annuity and a
qualified joint and survivor annuity for the participant and the participant’s
surviving spouse.
Background information
Under ERISA, a defined contribution plan administrator is
required to provide benefit statements to participants. Depending on the
situation, these statements must be provided quarterly, annually or upon
written request. In 2013, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) issued an advance
notice of proposed rulemaking providing rules that would have required benefit
statements provided to defined contribution plan participants to include an
estimated lifetime income stream of payments based on the participant’s account
balance.
Some employers began providing this information in these
statements — even though it wasn’t required.
But in the near future, employers will have to begin providing
information to their employees about lifetime income streams.
Effective date
Fortunately, the effective date of the requirement has been
delayed until after the DOL issues guidance. It won’t go into effect until 12
months after the DOL issues a final rule. The law also directs the DOL to
develop a model disclosure.
Plan fiduciaries, plan sponsors, or others won’t have liability
under ERISA solely because they provided the lifetime income stream
equivalents, so long as the equivalents are derived in accordance with the
assumptions and guidance and that they include the explanations contained in
the model disclosure.
Stay tuned
Critics of the new rules argue the required disclosures will
lead to confusion among participants and they question how employers will
arrive at the income projections. For now, employers have to wait for the DOL
to act. We’ll update you when that happens. Contact us if you have questions
about this requirement or other provisions in the SECURE Act.
© 2019
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