Commenters Express Concern About State-Run Retirement Plans

In comments to the DOL, the ARA and Voya Financial say the DOL’s proposal for state-run retirement plans for private-sector employees will create a lack of uniformity.

Voya Financial says it agrees there is an urgent need to expand access to workplace retirement savings plans to address the retirement savings gap; however, it believes the Department of Labor’s (DOL’s) proposal is not effective solution and would create new challenges for small businesses and their employees.

In its comment letter to the DOL, Voya says the proposals would enable a 50-state patchwork of government-administered retirement savings vehicles with inconsistent state and local regulations, low annual contribution limits, no opportunity for employer contributions and limited access to retirement planning and advice. This patchwork will be difficult, if not impossible, to dismantle once built, and, if other layers of systems or requirements are added at the federal level in the future, there will be an even more confusing “50 plus one” patchwork of state and federal standards, rather than a single, streamlined standard, it says.

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Voya contends that retirement readiness is best achieved through a combination of automatic enrollment, sufficiently high limits for employee contributions, flexibility for employers to match contributions, access to high-quality retirement planning advice and availability of an appropriate range of investment alternatives. It urges the DOL to withdraw its proposal, and instead to seek a uniform federal solution that encourages employers to offer 401(k)s and similar retirement savings plans, which it says have long track records of helping Americans successfully prepare for retirement.

NEXT: Level the playing field

The proposed rule by the DOL sets forth conditions for a “safe harbor” under which a state established payroll deduction IRA Program will not be considered to be subject to Title I of ERISA. Voya notes that nondiscrimination testing requirements present significant challenges for small employers, where the small pool of participants can make compliance statistically challenging.

While these requirements are waived for employers who adopt Simple IRA plans and safe-harbor 401(k) plans, those plans require an employer match and, in many cases, immediate vesting of the employer match. Voya contends these requirements act as disincentives to employers who might otherwise make Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) plans available to their employees, and suggests it would better prepare currently underserved American workers for retirement to reduce or eliminate these costs, thus increasing the number of small employers willing to make ERISA plans available.

Similarly, in its comment letter to the DOL, the American Retirement Association (ARA) says it is concerned that the proposed rule creates different standards for payroll deduction IRA programs administered by a state and those administered by private-sector providers outside of a state program. ARA contends the lack of a private-sector alternative operating alongside the various state programs would be contrary to the overall objective of increasing access to workplace retirement savings programs.

The ARA believes that because the proposal significantly limits the employer’s involvement, it could and should be extended to all payroll deduction IRA programs irrespective of whether provided under a state-law mandate, a state established arrangement or an arrangement offered by a private-sector provider.

The ARA recommends that the non-ERISA safe harbor under the proposed rule be expanded to apply to comparable payroll deduction programs established and administered by private-sector providers, and that the non-ERISA safe harbor under the proposed rule be available to any payroll deduction IRA program without regard to whether it is mandated by a state law (or offered under a state established IRA Program).

Alternatively, the ARA recommends that the final rule include an amendment to the non-ERISA safe harbor contained in ERISA Regulation Section 2510.3-2(d) to permit automatic enrollment features.

GASB 68 a Wake Up Call for Local Governments

Researchers found that for 92 cities, the unfunded liability as a percentage of revenue rises from 37% before GASB 68 pension accounting standards to 70% after.

Researchers for the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College conclude that new accounting standards forcing cities to recognize their share of a state’s unfunded pension plan liability may lead them to take more interest in having these liabilities paid off.

A report, “GASB 68: How Will State Unfunded Liabilities Affect Big Cities?” notes that to increase the visibility of pension commitments, GASB Statement 68 makes two changes. First, it moves pension funding information from the footnotes to the balance sheets of employers. Second, it requires employers that participate in so-called “cost-sharing” plans to provide information regarding their share of the “net pension liability” on their books. 

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According to the researchers, no information currently appears for employers participating in cost-sharing plans, so the new provisions require determining each employer’s share of the net pension liability and including that amount on the balance sheet. They contend that local governments—now saddled with a portion of the state plan’s unfunded liabilities on their books—may be more interested in seeing the unfunded liability decline over time.

The researchers looked at a sample of 173 cities and towns, which includes cities that administer their own local plans, cities that participate only in state plans, and cities that have some combination of the two. The key metric was a city’s contribution to a given state plan as a percentage of the plan’s total annual required contribution (ARC). If ARC information was not available, the apportionment was based on the ratio of a city’s actual contributions to the state plan’s total actual contributions.

NEXT: Greater potential impact on small cities

Ninety-two of the cities in the sample participate in cost-sharing state plans and are affected by GASB 68. The measure of the impact in the analysis is the change in the unfunded liability relative to a city’s own-source revenue (to standardize for city size). For the 92 cities affected, the unfunded liability as a percentage of revenue rises from 37% before GASB 68 to 70% after. Because GASB 68 simply shifts the recognition of these liabilities from the states to the cities, the unfunded liability for the states drops by a corresponding amount (in dollar terms).

According to the report, the aggregate numbers hide much variation. Thirty-seven percent of the 92 cities have their unfunded liability as a percentage of revenue increase by less than 20 percentage points. However, about one-third of the affected cities in the sample experience increases of more than 60 percentage points.

However, while the overall impact of GASB 68 on the 92 affected cities within the sample is large, the impact on the total 173 cities is much smaller—about 9 percentage points (a 12% increase). The reason is that the 92 cities are small; they make up only about one-quarter of the total revenue in the sample cities.

The report may be downloaded from here.

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