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Hopes Remain High for Portman-Cardin Bill
Fresh off the recent success of their push for a default electronic disclosure rule, retirement industry lobbyists are turning their attention back to a popular bipartisan bill introduced by two influential senators.
Retirement industry advocates scored a major victory last week with the finalization of the electronic default disclosure regulation by the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL).
Largely mirroring the proposed version of the rule, which was put forward last year, the final rule allows employers to deliver retirement plan disclosures to employees electronically by default, with the ability for plan participants to opt in to paper mailings if preferred. The leadership at the DOL says this measure will reduce printing, mailing and related plan costs by an estimated $3.2 billion over the next decade. The rule will also make disclosures more readily accessible and useful for participants, they say, while preserving the rights of those who prefer paper disclosures.
Chris Spence, director of federal government relations at TIAA, says the timing of the final regulation should be helpful as retirement plans deal with the effects of the coronavirus pandemic.
“One of the important changes made to the final rule versus the proposal from last year is that the new safe harbor for doing default electronic delivery is made available immediately,” Spence says. “Originally, the effective date was to be 60 days after publication in the federal register, which just happened a day or two ago. This means that sponsors can rely on the safe harbor as they prepare their next quarterly statements.”
Spence says the government’s projected savings figures seem reasonable, pointing to the results of a recent SPARK [Society of Professional Asset Managers and Recordkeepers] Institute analysis that pegs the potential annual savings in the range of $250 million to $400 million a year. He is also in the camp that believes electronic disclosures should inspire more participants to get engaged with their plan providers’ websites, which contain many helpful planning tools and calculators.
“We feel the final rule will help people engage with various digital resources,” Spence says. “Providers have worked very hard in recent years to strengthen the digital experience, and I think that will help participants save more and make better decisions overall. That point has been a big part of our conversations with Congress about electronic delivery.”
Spence said he feels electronic disclosures will also be much timelier from the perspective of tracking performance and returns.
“When people are getting paper statements, especially during periods of significant market volatility, that information can already be quite stale,” he observes. “The digital approach offers the freshest possible information.”
Stepping back, Spence says his focus has shifted from electronic delivery to the implementation of the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act, which continues even as the coronavirus pandemic raises significant challenges for employers and plan providers alike.
“The SECURE Act is now law, but the actual implementation of its many provisions remains a big lift,” he says.
Additionally, Spence and his Washington-focused peers are turning their attention back to the Retirement Security and Savings Act, proposed by Senators Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Ben Cardin, D-Maryland. Spence says the Portman-Cardin bill is “very complementary to the SECURE Act.” While near-term passage of the bill seems unlikely, it is possible, especially given that some members of the House of Representatives are working on their own version of the legislation behind the scenes.
Of the many provisions that would make changes to employer-sponsored retirement plans and individual retirement accounts (IRAs), lobbyists and analysts are keen on an additional catch-up provision that would permit those over the age of 60 to save an additional $10,000 each year in their 401(k) plans. Another provision would provide for the indexing of IRA catch-up contributions, which are currently set at $1,000 and do not change—unlike other limits that are indexed for inflation. Furthermore, the law would also make two changes to “SIMPLE IRA” plans, or savings incentive match plans for employees. The first would permit employers to make additional contributions on behalf of workers, and the second would permit these plans to offer Roth contributions.