Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Snapshots

“Snapshots” is a feature of the NCTR Federal E-News, intended to give you a very brief summary of an issue, event, or publication(s), and then provide links to appropriate back-up materials. This is not intended to replace the more in-depth analysis of issues which will continue to be the primary focus of the e-News, but will allow coverage of a larger number of issues of interest to NCTR members.


GASB Approves Exposure Draft for Pension Accounting Rules Changes


The week of June 27th, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) approved Exposure Drafts as part of its project on pension accounting and financial reporting. The full documents will be available on the GASB website on July 8th. Once they are reviewed, NCTR will hold a webinar on the details and implications of this latest iteration of proposed changes to pension accounting and disclosure rules.

The GASB review of Statement No. 25, “Financial Reporting for Defined Benefit Pension Plans and Note Disclosures for Defined Contribution Plans,” and Statement No. 27, “Accounting for Pensions by State and Local Governmental Employers” began in January of 2006, when the project was added to GASB’s research agenda. Then it was added to the current agenda in April, 2008. The Invitation to Comment was issued in March of 2009, and the Preliminary Views were released in June of 2010.

Once the drafts are formally released, there will be a 90 day period in which to submit written comments. There will also be public hearings: on October 3rd (LaGuardia); October 13th (San Francisco); and October 20th (Chicago O’Hare).

GASB will then begin a final deliberation process to consider the comments and perhaps make further changes in the standards, although at this stage, it is unlikely that there will be many such modifications. Then, probably sometime in the summer of 2012, the final rules will be issued. According to Robert Attmore, GASB’s Chairman, there will likely be a transition period of at least a year before they begin to take effect for larger plans, so they probably will not begin to be implemented until 2013.

New NCTR/NASRA Blog

NCTR and NASRA announced the launch of their new blog, PensionDialog.com, and its corresponding Twitter account @PensionDialog, on June 22nd.

The target audience for both tools is the media, policy makers and staff, and other stakeholders. Both the blog and Twitter will be used to promote research and news, respond to articles and newly released studies, and promote initiatives, including partners' work, from across the U.S.

NASRA and NCTR will continue to serve their members with news and information on each of their individual websites. The PensionDialog blog account will be administered by Ady Dewey, the new NCTR/NASRA manager of external affairs. The new blog has already proved invaluable in getting information out on a “real-time” basis to the media and others concerning the latest Rauh/Novy-Marx study (see story above in this E-News.)

A separate venue for pension system communicators has also been created. This forum is intended to share best practices, strategic messaging, and news. For information on how to connect to this blog, please contact Ady at NASRA.NCTRcomm@gmail.com.

New NIRS Paper Finds Public Pension Asset Exhaustion Only a Remote Possibility

The National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS) released a new review of two economic studies that evaluate pension sustainability based on the ability of pension trust funds to pay benefits promised over the coming years. The may 5, 2011, paper examines the strengths and weaknesses of these studies and assesses their value as a tool for policymakers.

One of the studies was “Can State and Local Pensions Muddle Through?” produced by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College in March of 2011. This report investigates two concepts for estimating when plans would run out of money. It found that using a more realistic “ongoing” framework, in which normal costs are used to cover benefit payments, most plans have enough for at least 30 years. Furthermore, these estimates were conservative, as they were based on 2009 data and therefore did not reflect the more recent run-up in the stock market. Nor did they incorporate recent efforts to increase employee contributions and reduce benefits for new employees. And they assumed that states pay only the normal cost when many make the full annual required contribution.

The other study of was “The Day of Reckoning For State Pension Plans,” a posting by Joshua Rauh on the “Everything Finance” blog of the Northwestern University’s Kellogg School Finance Department. According to this study, seven states would run out of money before 2020 and thirty more states are expected to run out of money during the 2020s.

NIRS found that the Rauh study’s theoretical estimates of the number of years in which public pension plans can continue to pay existing benefits based on the investment of current assets “represent a flawed, simplified way to view the sustainability of these pension plans.” The author of the NIRS paper, Diane Oakley, the new NIRS Executive Director, wrote that “With some limited exceptions, states and localities do not face an immediate pension shortfall that would require sponsors to pay benefits from operating revenues even under dire termination assumptions.”
Bipartisan Effort to Control 401(k) Leakage

Noting that the gap between what Americans will need in retirement and what they will actually have saved is estimated to be a staggering 6.6 trillion dollars, Senators Herb Kohl (D-WI), Chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, and Mike Enzi (R-WY), the Ranking Republican member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, have introduced legislation intended to help stop 401(k) plan leakage by providing flexibility to loan repayment hardship tax rules and limit 401(k) loan practices.

“As the frequency of retirement fund loans have gone up, the amount of money people are saving for their retirement has gone down,” Senator Kohl noted. “While having access to a loan in an emergency is an important feature for many participants, a 401(k) savings account should not be used as a piggy bank.”

The “Savings Enhancement by Alleviating Leakage (SEAL) in 401(k) Savings Act of 2011” (S. 1121) would:

  1. extend the period for repayment of loans if a 401(k) plan terminates or a plan participant becomes unemployed; 
  2. prohibit 401(k) plans from allowing the use of credit cards or similar arrangements to access loan amounts; and 
  3. allow 401(k) plan participants to make additional contributions to a plan during the six month period following a hardship distribution.
The legislation has been referred to the Senate Finance, where no further action has been taken.

The SEC and Credit Rating Agencies

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has been very busy the last three months on several matters relating to Credit Rating Agencies, which were a major focus of criticism for their perceived role in the collapse of the mortgage securities market that, when it collapsed, contributed significantly to the financial meltdown that followed.

  1. On April 27th, the SEC proposed amendments that would remove references to credit ratings in several rules under the Securities Exchange Act. These proposals represent the next step in a series of actions taken under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act to remove references to credit ratings within agency rules and, where appropriate, replace them with alternative criteria. The purpose is to eliminate over-reliance on credit ratings by both regulators and investors – and to encourage independent assessments of creditworthiness rather than uncorroborated reliance on credit ratings.

    According to SEC Chairman Mary Shapiro, “The most significant proposed change in this area would preclude firms from looking solely to ratings when calculating capital charges for commercial paper, nonconvertible debt, and preferred stock under the Commission’s net capital rule. Instead, each firm with proprietary positions in these instruments would need to look at a variety of factors, and they would need to have and document procedures for doing so.”
  2. On May 10th, the SEC requested public input to assist in their study on the credit rating process for structured finance products. Specifically, they are seeking comments on (a) the credit rating process for structured finance products and the conflicts of interest associated with the issuer-pay and the subscriber-pay models; (b) the feasibility of an assignment system in which a public or private utility or a self-regulatory organization would assign a credit rating agency to determine credit ratings for structured finance products; and (c) alternative means for compensating credit rating agencies that would create incentives for accurate credit ratings for structured finance products. Comments will be accepted for four months. The SEC is to submit the findings of its study to Congress by July 21, 2012.
  3. On May 18th, the SEC proposed a number of new rules and amendments intended to increase transparency and improve the integrity of credit ratings. According to the SEC. the proposed rules would implement certain provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and enhance the SEC’s existing rules governing credit ratings and Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organizations (NRSROs).

    “In passing the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress noted that credit ratings applied to structured financial products proved inaccurate and contributed significantly to the mismanagement of risks by financial institutions and investors,” SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said. “Our proposed rules are intended to strengthen the integrity and improve the transparency of credit ratings.”
Under the SEC’s proposal, NRSROs would be required to:

  • Report on internal controls.
  • Protect against conflicts of interest.
  •  Establish professional standards for credit analysts.
  • Publicly provide – along with the publication of the credit rating – disclosure about the credit rating and the methodology used to determine it.
  • Enhance their public disclosures about the performance of their credit ratings.
The SEC’s proposal also requires disclosure concerning third-party due diligence reports for asset-backed securities. Public comments will be accepted on the proposals for two months.
New Pew Center Study Finds Pension Underfunding Increased in 2009

In April, the Pew Center on the States released a new report entitled “The Widening Gap: The Great Recession’s Impact on State Pension and Retiree Health Care Costs.” The report found that “In the midst of the Great Recession and severe investment declines, the gap between the promises states made for employees’ retirement benefits and the money they set aside to pay for them grew to at least $1.26 trillion in fiscal year 2009, resulting in a 26 percent increase in one year.”

Pew reported that the shortfall was about evenly divided between pensions, which they found had a $660 billion funding gap, and retiree health care and other benefits , which accounted for the remaining $607 billion, with assets totaling $31 billion to pay for $638 billion in liabilities. In other words, with $2.28 trillion in funding for $2.94 trillion in pension liabilities in 2009, state pension plans were 78 percent funded, while retiree health care benefits are only 5 percent funded.

While PEW found that the value of assets in state pension plans dropped a record 19.1 percent in 2009, it also recognized that, “For most states, whose fiscal year 2009 began on July 1, 2008 and ended on June 30, 2009, these data capture the worst effects of the financial crisis.” Pew also acknowledges that “ More recently, many plans have reported double-digit investment gains for fiscal year 2010.”

In an effort to put the Pew report in some perspective, NCTR and NASRA worked together to put out a joint Issue Brief prior to the Pew Center report’s release. This Issue Brief – entitled “Strong Investment Gains and Legislative Changes Speeding Public Pension Recovery” -- underscored that, at the end of calendar year 2010, aggregate state and local government retirement system assets totaled $2.93 trillion, a 35 percent increase from their quarterly low point during the market collapse.

“These asset levels are also nearly 25 percent higher than they were on June 30, 2009 – a date on which many recent studies on the financial condition of state and local pension trusts are based,” the brief noted. “Since then, not only have investment returns rebounded sharply, but many states have adopted changes to benefit levels and financing structures that have positively impacted pension trusts,” it reminded readers.

GAO Finds that Most Private Sector Retirement Plan Tax Benefits go to Higher Income Workers

In a foreshadowing of what will likely be a centerpiece of any future debate over tax reform and deficit reduction, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has taken a look at the tax expenditures associated with retirement savings in the private sector and found that they benefit mostly higher income employees.

GAO said that while the existing system of tax preferences for pensions has played at least a supporting role in fostering current levels of pension plan coverage, private plan participation nevertheless remains stalled at roughly 50 percent of the private sector workforce. Furthermore, even for the 50 percent of the private sector workforce that does participate in a plan, GAO found that for defined contribution plans, “a disproportionate share of these tax incentives accrues to higher income earners.”

Specifically, while 72 percent of those who make tax-deferred contributions at the maximum limit earned more than $126,000 annually in 2007, less than 1 percent of those who earned less than $52,000 annually were able to do so. Also, GAO said that “even the additional $5,500 contribution permitted to participants 50 and older may not allow moderate income workers to catch up anytime soon.” In short, private sector retirement savings tax incentives accrue primarily to higher income employees and do relatively little to help lower income workers save for retirement.

The subject of the tax expenditures associated with retirement savings incentives is an increasing topic of conversation among policy makers on and off Capitol Hill. Tax expenditures are losses to the U.S. Treasury that result from granting certain deductions, exemptions, deferrals or credits to specific categories of taxpayers in order to encourage or promote certain policy objectives. They are an indirect form of government spending on specific policy programs. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, the largest FY 2009 tax expenditures were the exclusion of health benefits from income taxation ($94.4 billion); the home mortgage interest deduction ($86.4 billion), and the net exclusion of pension contributions and earnings associated with defined benefit and defined contribution retirement plans ($73 billion).

Last year’s two major deficit commissions both called for a scrapping of the existing system, including many of the expenditures related to retirement savings. For example, the Domenici -Rivlin Task Force suggested restructuring itemized deductions, eliminating “almost all” tax expenditures and modifying those for 401(k) plans, IRAs and Keogh plans, permitting individuals and employers combined to contribute up to 20 percent of annual earnings to such qualified plans, up to a maximum of $20,000 per year, indexed to inflation. The goal, they said, was to ensure that “qualified plans will no longer be a vehicle for wealthy individuals to convert a substantial share of their assets into tax-free retirement assets.”

In response to these suggestions that the tax expenditures related to defined contribution plans be cut, the American Society of Pension Professionals & Actuaries (ASPPA) recently produced a study examining these estimates of tax expenditures as they applied to defined contribution plans. They argue that tax expenditure estimates for retirement savings provisions should be prepared on what they refer to as a present-value basis. “Measuring retirement savings provisions on a present-value basis would help policymakers understand the lifetime tax benefits occurring with respect to retirement savings contributions and would allow an ‘apples to apples’ comparison with tax expenditures such as current deductions and credits,” they argue..

Using this present-value basis, they find that the one- tax expenditure estimates related to contributions to defined contribution retirement plans are 34 percent lower than the Joint Committee on Taxation’s one-year estimates and 54 percent lower than the Treasury one-year estimates. In addition, the present-value tax expenditure estimates of contributions made in the first five years are 55 percent lower than the JCT five-year estimates and 75 percent lower than the Treasury five-year estimates.

A similar analysis theoretically could extend to defined benefit plans, the study notes, but to simplify the discussion, the ASPPA study presents only defined contribution plans.

For the DC plan community, the fight over tax expenditures related to retirement savings is a very real one. But what about defined benefit plans? Is it conceivable that Congress would cut DC plans’ tax expenditures but leave DB plans untouched?

CRR Suggests “Stacked” Hybrid Plans as New retirement Model

Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research has a report suggesting a new way in which to combine the defined benefit (DB) model with the defined contribution (DC) plan in the public sector.

The new approach would be to “stack” the two together, combining a defined benefit plan based on a certain amount of wages – for example, the first $50,000 – with a defined contribution plan on amounts above that.

“The advantage of the ‘stacked’ approach is that it allows employees with modest earnings to receive the full protection of a defined benefit plan,” the report argues. “This group would be the most vulnerable if required to rely on a 401(k) for a portion of their core retirement benefit.”

More highly-paid public employees would still have the protection of a defined benefit plan as a base and would then rely on the 401(k) for earnings replacement that exceeded the earnings of a typical private sector worker. “This overall arrangement offers a reasonable balance by providing adequate and secure benefits targeted to public employees who need them most while limiting the risk to taxpayers of covering large pension shortfalls,” the report concludes.

“Defined contribution plans may well have a role in the public sector,” the report’s authors note, “but in combination with, not as an alternative to, defined benefit plans.”

GASB Issues Report on Timeliness of State and Local Financial Reporting

GASB has released a research brief that examines how long it takes state and local governments to issue financial reports prepared in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), and how the passage of time affects the usefulness of the financial information for users.

Based on its review of the financial reports of the 50 states, the 100 largest counties and localities, and the 50 largest independent school districts and special districts for the 2006–2008 reporting periods, GASB found that in general, 73 percent of the largest governments issued their reports within 6 months, while 2 percent took more than 1 year.

The largest local and county governments and independent school districts issued their financial reports approximately six months after the fiscal year-end on average, while State governments averaged closer to seven months. Special districts averaged about four months.

GASB also looked at smaller governments, and found, based on a random sample drawn from the list of 89,527 governments included in the 2007 Census of Governments, and found that smaller county governments took an average of 8 months to issue their financial reports, while smaller local governments took 6 months. Overall, under 46 percent of the smaller governments examined issued their reports within 6 months, and 7 percent took more than 1 year.
GASB also found that financial report information retains some degree of usefulness to municipal bond analysts, legislative fiscal staff, and researchers at taxpayer associations and citizen groups for up to six months after the fiscal year-end. However, afterward its usefulness quickly declines.

While GASB does not require that GAAP-based financial reports be issued within a specific timeframe, the research brief notes that timeliness -- or the lack thereof -- continues to be a central “as it strives to balance the benefits of information to its users with the cost of providing that information.”

New Survey by Prudential Finds Growing Interest in Guaranteed Retirement Income for Life

An Interesting new survey from Prudential supports the need and desire for a national response to retirement insecurity and reinforces NIRS polling data on this point. The report on the survey, “The Next Chapter: Meeting Investment and Retirement Challenges,” also suggests that there is growing interest in the kind of guaranteed income for life that DB plans provide.

Here are some of the results as stated in the Prudential survey:
  • Most investors believe that the investments they have today are not earning enough to make up for the losses they’ve experienced over the past few years (73%). In the aftermath of the recession, 72% of Americans acknowledge that they need to think differently about how they save, invest, and plan for retirement—a recognition perhaps that “the rules have changed”.
  • Six in 10 (58%) say they want to feel less pressured, less threatened, and less overwhelmed by the prospect of making financial decisions. However, 40% are going it alone with no help from an advisor; in fact, 53% don’t believe an advisor is helpful even in extreme market conditions.
  • More than half (54%) do not feel well prepared to take on the task of rebuilding their portfolios, and three-quarters (73%) point to challenges that span from deciphering confusing product information to navigating an overwhelming amount of options to overcoming distrust of advisors and firms. Nearly seven in 10 believe there are few financial services firms that are trustworthy.
The survey also found that investors of all ages find guaranteed products appealing—41% are “very” interested in investment products that can provide guaranteed lifetime income. What’s more, survey respondents showed a genuine appreciation for the value of the guarantees—nearly two-thirds (65%) agree that purchasing a guarantee is not all about the cost, but rather the value received for the price paid.

GRS Looks at Recent Trends in COLAs

In their search for ways of controlling pension costs and stabilizing required contributions, many public pension plans and their sponsors are reviewing their plan designs. This can often include taking a look at the costs associated with cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs).

Paul Zorn, Mark Randall, and Joe Newton with Gabriel Roeder Smith & Company have written an article that discusses the purpose of COLAs, how they are provided, and the advantages and disadvantages of different types of COLAs. It also discusses recent changes in public-sector COLAs and the relative costs of COLA designs.

Brand New GAO Report Looks at Ensuring Income Throughout Retirement

A newly-released report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) examines what it refers to as the “difficult choices” in trying to ensure income throughout retirement.

GAO found that most retirees rely primarily on Social Security and pass up opportunities for additional lifetime retirement income. Furthermore, only 6 percent of those with a defined contribution plan chose or purchased an annuity at retirement. Those in the middle income group who had savings typically drew down those savings gradually, but an estimated 3.4 million people (9 percent) aged 65 or older in 2009 had incomes (excluding any noncash assistance) below the poverty level. (Among people of all ages the poverty rate was 14.3 percent.)

“Given the long-term trends of rising life expectancy and the shift from DB to DC plans, aging workers must increasingly focus not just on accumulating assets for retirement but also on how to manage those assets to have an adequate income throughout their retirement,” GAO pointed out. Furthermore, GAO noted that workers are increasingly finding themselves “depending on retirement savings vehicles that they must self-manage, where they not only must save consistently and invest prudently over their working years, but must now continue to make comparable decisions throughout their retirement years.”

GAO also stressed that although retirement savings may be larger in the future as more workers have opportunities to save over longer periods through strategies such as automatic enrollment in DC plans, “many will likely continue to face little margin for error.” “Poor or imprudent investment decisions may mean the difference between a secure retirement and poverty,” GAO warns.

Monday, March 28, 2011

New Public Pension Reporting Legislation Introduced in House, Senate

As expected, legislation (HR 567) was once again introduced in the House of Representatives by Congressman Devin Nunes (R-CA) on February 9th to require State and local government sponsors of public pension plans to provide specific funding information to the US Treasury Department. Failure to do so would cause the offending State or political subdivision to lose Federal tax benefits with respect to any State or local bond issues. No hearings specifically on the legislation have been held before the House Ways and Means Committee, to which the bill has been referred, but there have been three hearings before other House Committee showcasing the legislation. A companion bill (S 347) has been introduced in the Senate by Senator Richard Burr (R-NC). While not a cosponsor of the legislation, Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT), the new Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee, to which the bill has been referred, recently gave a speech on the Senate floor warning that public employee pension plans will bankrupt state and local government if nothing is done. He said he plans to work with his Senate colleagues who “have a proposal to address the problem.” NCTR, NASRA and seven other national organizations representing public sector organizations have sent a personal letter to every member of Congress opposing the legislation.

The new legislation, HR 567, entitled the “Public Employee Pension Transparency Act” (PEPTA), is identical to the bill (HR 6484), which was introduced on December 2, 2010, by Mr. Nunes, who is now the 5th ranking GOP member of the House Ways and Means Committee. As before, Mr. Nunes was joined in introducing the bill by Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI), also a senior member of Ways and Means as well as the Chairman of the House Budget Committee, and Congressman Darrell Issa (R-CA), the Chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. The legislation now has 44 cosponsors in addition to these three. All but one – Congressman Mike Quigley (D-IL) -- are Republicans, and four, including Ryan and Nunes, are members of the House Ways and Means Committee.

Reporting Requirements

Were the legislation to become law, an Annual Report as well as potential Supplementary Reports would be required to be filed by the plan sponsor of a State or local government employee pension benefit plan (other than a defined contribution plan) with the Secretary of the Treasury. The Annual Report would have to include the following:

  1. A schedule of the funding status of the plan;
  2. A schedule of contributions by the plan sponsor for the plan year;
  3. Alternative projections for each of the next 20 plan years relating to the amount of annual contributions, the fair market value of plan assets, current liability, the funding percentage, and other matters specified by the Treasury Department to “achieve comparability across plans;”
  4. A statement of the actuarial assumptions used for the plan year; 
  5. A statement of the number of plan participants who are retired or separated from service and are either receiving benefits or are entitled to future benefits and those who are active under the plan;
  6. A statement of the plan's investment returns; 
  7. A statement of the degree to which unfunded liabilities are expected to be eliminated; and
  8. A statement of the amount of pension obligation bonds outstanding.
While it is true that several of these statements are already required to be developed as part of the plan sponsors’ current reporting obligations in connection with their Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs), several are not, such as the 20 years worth of alternative projections; a statement of the “degree and manner“ in which the plan sponsor expects to eliminate any unfunded current liability; and a statement of outstanding pension obligation bonds.

In addition, it is difficult to know what such other statements required by the Treasury Department to achieve “comparability across plans” might look like and what kind effort might be required to produce them.

Finally, as Paul Zorn with GRS has noted, it also depends on how the term “current liability” is defined. If current liability is defined as “the liability currently used by public pension plans,” then several of the statements, as previously noted, are already required by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) to be reported. But what if “current liability” is defined to mean the liability based only on salary and service to date (i.e., determined using the traditional unit credit actuarial cost method)? As Paul points out, then none of the numbers would already be developed and reported because no state and local plans use that method.

Therefore, the legislation’s annual reporting requirement could potentially impose significant costs and confusion in terms of the development of the required statements.

Then there are the potential Supplementary Reports. These would be required in any case in which either the value of plan assets in the Annual Report is determined using a standard other than fair market value, or the interest rate or rates used to determine the value of liabilities or as the discount value for liabilities are not interest rates based on US Treasury obligation yield curve rates.

The Supplementary Report would be required to include certain information specified in the Annual Report -- specifically , a schedule of the funding status of the plan; 20 years worth of alternative projections; a statement of plan investment returns; and the degree and manner the plan sponsor expects to eliminate its current unfunded liability -- but determined by valuing plan assets at fair market value and by using certain Treasury yield curves based on the following three periods: benefits reasonably determined to be payable during the 5-year period beginning on the first day of the plan year; benefits reasonably determined to be payable during the following 15-year period; and benefits reasonably determined to be payable thereafter.

Clearly, these statements would be new for most plans. Here, the concern is not just the time and cost involved with their preparation, but the substantially increased, artificial liability measurements that the use of the Treasury yield curves would produce, which, along with the unsmoothed valuation of assets, would significantly understate funding levels. The results will be a set of measures that differ substantially from those used to fund plans or required for accounting and financial reporting purposes under GASB. They will only serve to confuse the public, not provide clarity with regard to public pension accounting.

Loss of Federal Tax Exemption for State, Local Bonds

Finally, there is the matter of what could happen if a report fails to be filed in a timely manner or there are errors in the report.

Actually, despite the requirement that the plan sponsor is to file the Annual Report and any Supplementary Reports, it is the failure of “State or local government employee pension benefit plans” to meet reporting requirements that triggers the penalty. This clearly raises the question of whether only the plan files the report, of whether each employer covered by the plan must file its own report.

As for the penalty itself and how it is to be applied, the legislation says that in the case of a plan’s failure to meet reporting requirements, then, “with respect to any plan maintained with respect to employees of one or more States or political subdivisions of one or more States, no specified Federal tax benefit shall be allowed or made with respect to any specified bond issued by any such State or political subdivision (or by any bonding authority acting on behalf, or for the benefit, of such State or political subdivision) during the noncompliance period.”

Needless to say, it appears somewhat unclear as to whose bonds could be affected in the case of a “failure to meet reporting requirements.” Does the language mean that any plan covering State or local government employees that fails to report appropriately will trigger a loss of Federal tax benefits for every bond issued by that State and any of its political subdivisions -- or just for the bonds issued by the sponsor of the plan that failed to report? This would be particularly important when a number of employers are covered by a single plan, or in the case of cost-sharing plans.

Depending upon how the language is interpreted, the impact on governmental finances could be devastating. Also, there is a question as to whether the loss of the Federal tax exemption would apply to all bonds, whenever issued by the noncompliant State or local government, during the noncompliance period, or only to those bonds issued during the noncompliance period. (The bill language provides that “no specified Federal tax benefit shall be allowed or made with respect to any specified bond issued by any such State or political subdivision (or by any bonding authority acting on behalf, or for the benefit, of such State or political subdivision) during the noncompliance period.”)

Depending on the answer to this question, the legislation could totally undercut investor confidence in the municipal bond market and have a devastating effect on muni-bond holders, an increasing number of whom are individual investors.

The Senate

This year, there is also a Senate companion bill, S 347, introduced by Senators Richard Burr (R-NC) and John Thune (R-SD). The bill is cosponsored by six other Senators – Isakson (R-GA), Grassley (R-IA), Kyl (R-AZ), Coburn (R-OK), Ensign (R-NV) and Chambliss (R-GA). Five of the bill’s supporters (Grassley, Kyl, Coburn, Ensign and Thune) are also members of the Senate Finance Committee, to which the bill has been referred.

Senator Burr was a former member of the House of Representatives for 10 years before being elected to the Senate in 2004, where he is a member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee. Senator Thune is also a former member of the House, having represented South Dakota from 1997 to 2003 before defeating then-Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle. Thune is a member of the Finance Committee, as well as a member of the Senate Budget Committee.

Senator Thune is also the Chairman of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, which publishes a variety of policy papers that are used by Republican Senators and their staffs to prepare for committee deliberations, floor debate, and votes. One such paper, prepared last August and entitled “Taxpayers Cannot Afford More State Bailouts,” says that “Unsustainable and underfunded pension obligations are robbing state budgets and draining funds from vital state government programs. Every state bailout, ostensibly for daily operating funds, allows the states to continue to pour money into these unsustainable pension plans.” Every week the Senate is in session, Republican Senators hold a policy lunch meeting, hosted by Thune, at which they discuss issues before the Senate, review the anticipated agenda, and discuss policy options.

Although he has not added his name as a cosponsor of the legislation, Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT), the new Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee, recently gave a speech on the Senate floor warning that public employee pension plans will bankrupt state and local government if nothing is done.

Senator Hatch is extremely critical of defined benefit plans while singing the virtues of defined contribution plans. “The rest of the world has moved toward 401(k) style plans,” he explained to his colleagues, because in DC plans, “costs are lower and more predictable” and they “fit well with an increasingly mobile and dynamic workforce.” State and local governments, on the other hand, “have remained wedded to expensive, traditional pension plans for far too long,” Hatch asserts.

Calling them “old-style, traditional pension plans,” Senator Hatch describes public sector DB plans as “costly, guaranteed lifetime retirement package, often with little or no cost-sharing by the public employee.” He lauds “forward-looking states” that have begun moving to 401(k) style plans. “In my home state of Utah, the traditional pension plan is being replaced,” Hatch insists.

Senator Hatch made it clear that it was his intention, “as Ranking Member of the Finance Committee, to find a way to address the public pension crisis.” In an apparent reference to the Burr legislation, he noted that “Some of my colleagues here in the Senate have a proposal to address the problem, and I will be working with them as well.” This could suggest that he will press for hearings on the legislation in the Senate Finance Committee.

Senator Hatch’s condemnation of public plans is particularly disappointing, given his past support for state and local government pensions. For example, in the late 1990’s, he was the primary Senate sponsor, along with Senator Kent Conrad (D-ND) , of legislation to provide a permanent moratorium on the application of the IRS non-discrimination rules to public pensions. In support of the legislation, Senator Hatch stressed that State and local government pension plans face a high level of scrutiny: “State law generally requires publicly elected legislators to amend the provisions of a public plan. Electoral accountability to the voters and media scrutiny serve as protections against abusive and discriminatory benefits.”

The one bright spot in all of this is Senator Hatch’s statement that “I have not yet settled on what I believe are the best solutions.” He states that “we are working hard and talking to the experts about the best way to proceed. “ NCTR intends to be among the “experts” with whom he consults, and has already met, along with other public sector organizations, with his new top pension counsel for the Finance Committee to discuss Hatch’s concerns.

Current Status

There is a large coalition of supporters for the Nunes/Burr legislation, including Grover Norquist (Americans for Tax Reform) and Randy Johnson of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. In an October 27, 2010 interview on CNN, Norquist explained that he is "in favor of moving all of our entitlement programs from defined benefit plans, which is what we have at present, what General Motors had for their pension setup, to defined contribution, basically to 401(k)’s." Norquist says that “The federal government could do that both with their employees, we do that with postal employees, which are a large chunk of government employees and we could do it with Social Security."

A new supporter for the cause is the National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB), who says that the bill “will protect small business owners from the costs associated with state and local governments' failure to address funding problems of their plans.”

While there are no hearings on the legislation currently planned by the House Ways and Means Committee or the Senate Finance Committee, the legislation has been discussed at three hearings in the House of Representatives before other Committees.

The first hearing was held by the Subcommittee on TARP, Financial Services, and Bailouts of Public and Private Programs of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. It was carefully coordinated with the Nunes bill’s introduction in the House, and was held on that same day. Although the hearing was nominally on State and municipal debt, a memo from the Committee Majority staff to GOP members of the Subcommittee made it clear that the focus was on pensions, stating at the outset that “pensions are the largest driver of state and municipal fiscal problems.”

Nevertheless, Iris Lav with the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities did an excellent job in rebutting these charges. In her testimony, she stated that claims that states and localities have $3 trillion in unfunded pension liabilities and that pension obligations are unmanageable” overstate the fiscal problem, fail to acknowledge that severe problems are concentrated in a small number of states, and often promote extreme actions rather than more appropriate solutions.”

(Most recently, Ms. Lav has produced a report for the CBPP on the Nunes/Burr legislation entitled “Proposed Public Employee Pension Reporting Requirements Are Unnecessary.” In it, she states that the legislation “would effectively short-circuit and override the GASB process by issuing a federal edict on how pension funds are to report liabilities.” It would be “unsound policy,” she argues, “to substitute heavy-handed and unnecessary federal intrusion (which seems designed in part to advance ideological goals) for the GASB standards and the financial market discipline that induces state and local governments to comply with those standards.”)

The House version of PEPTA was also discussed at a February 14th hearing by the Subcommittee on Courts, Commercial and Administrative Law of the House Judiciary Committee on “The Role of Public Employee Pensions in Contributing to State Insolvency and the Possibility of a State Bankruptcy Chapter.” Witnesses included Joshua Rauh, former Goldman Sachs economist and currently an Associate Professor of Finance with the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University. Democratic staff was offered the opportunity to invite one witness, and they chose Keith Brainard, NASRA’s Research Director, who very effectively called Rauh’s underfunding numbers into question.

(In this regard, it is well to note a recent article in the February 2011 issue of Government Finance Review (GFR, a publication of the Government Finance officers Association ) by Ronald D. Picur, professor emeritus of accounting at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Lance J. Weiss, a senior actuarial consultant with Gabriel, Roeder, Smith and Company, entitled “Addressing Media Misconceptions about Public-Sector Pensions and Bankruptcy.” This article also calls into question much of the work of Rauh and other of his colleagues. As this article notes, some of Rauh’s most frequently cited works are working papers that have not undergone the same academic scrutiny and vetting associated with submission to refereed academic journals. Such a vetting process, using acknowledged experts in the discipline to serve as referees to review the findings without knowing the authors, helps to emphasize objectivity and independence. As a result, none of this research has been subject to scrutiny by the appropriate subject-matter experts —namely actuaries who practice in the public sector -- before being cited as the “gold standard” for public pension facts by the media and others.)

Finally, the Nunes legislation came up most recently in another hearing by the Subcommittee on TARP, Financial Services, and Bailouts of Public and Private Programs on March 15th entitled “State And Municipal Debt: The Coming Crisis? Part II.” However, as with the first hearing, it was all about public pensions, with the Majority staff briefing memo once again claiming that “The largest threat to state and municipal fiscal security is government-sponsored pension plans.”

Dean Baker, the co-founder and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (CEPR), testified at this hearing and strongly disagreed. He also criticized the proposed Nunes legislation. Dr. Baker told the Subcommittee that:

  • Most of the pension shortfall is attributable to the plunge in the stock market in the years 2007-2009.
  • The argument that pension funds should only assume a risk-free rate of return in assessing pension fund adequacy ignores the distinction between governmental units, which need be little concerned over the timing of market fluctuations, and individual investors, who must be very sensitive to market timing.
  • The size of the projected state and local government shortfalls measured as a share of future gross state products appear manageable.
These conclusions are more fully set forth in his recent CEPR paper entitled “The Origins and Severity of the Public Pension Crisis.”

NCTR Actions

In addition to assisting Congressional staff in preparing for these three hearings, NCTR has been working with other public sector organizations to get the facts out concerning the Nunes/Burr legislation. These efforts have included:

  • A January briefing of key Senate staff of the Finance, HELP and Aging Committees on the state of public pensions, provided by Nancy Kopp, Maryland State Treasurer and President of the National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers (NASACT); James E. Mitchell, Jr., member of the city council of Charlotte, North Carolina, and President of the National League of Cities (NLC); and Dana Bilyeu, Executive Officer of the Public Employees' Retirement System of Nevada.
  • A personal letter to every member of Congress in opposition to the Nunes/Burr legislation from NCTR, NASRA, NASACT, NLC, the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA), the National Association of Counties (NACo), the United States Conference of Mayors , the International City/County Management Association (ICMA), and the International Public Management Association for Human Resources (IPMA-HR).
  • A fact sheet on the Nunes/Burr “PEPTA” legislation, describing what the bill does and doesn’t do.
  • Meetings with key staff on the House Ways and Means Committee, the House Education and the Workforce Committee, the Senate Finance Committee, the Senate HELP Committee, and the Senate Special Committee on Aging.
  • NCTR Press Statements on the introduction of the Nunes legislation and the House testimony of Keith Brainard.
Outlook

The “score,” or cost to the Federal government, of the legislation has not yet been determined. While its requirements for increased staffing, drafting of regulations and the creation and maintenance of a new Federal database by the Treasury Department will have cost implications for the Federal government, what remains to be seen is whether the bill will be viewed as a possible revenue saver because of its prohibition on Federal bailouts of state and local pensions, and will therefore be given a positive revenue score.

It is unlikely that the legislation will move independently in either the House or Senate. However, it is not impossible that the House leadership could support its inclusion in a larger tax bill that could advance either this year or next. Stripping provisions from such a larger measure can be very problematic.

Therefore, it is critically important that this legislation be taken very seriously. It is not just a platform for media attention, but a serious effort at establishing a Federal take-over of public pension accounting that will so inflate the perceived “cost” of public sector DB pensions that State and local governments will see themselves as having little choice but to convert to DC plans.

2011 NCTR/NASRA Joint Legislative Workshop - An Overview

Meeting later in the year than previously, NCTR and NASRA were able to successfully hold their Joint Legislative Workshop on Monday, March 7th, in Washington, DC, without freezing weather or the threat of a blizzard. Speakers included key Congressional pension staff, Treasury Department and SEC officials, and a Special Assistant to President Obama. A former Member of Congress also provided attendees with a candid assessment of the political environment facing them on Capitol Hill and some suggestions as to how best to deal with it. The workshop concluded promptly at 3:00 PM, giving some attendees time to visit their Congressional delegations. The annual event received good marks from attendees, so please be sure to plan on attending next year’s workshop if you weren’t able to make this year’s meeting.

The annual NCTR/NASRA Joint Legislative Workshop came at a particularly critical moment for public pensions in Washington, DC. From Capitol Hill to the Federal departments and regulatory agencies, the level of interest in governmental plans and concern for their continued sustainability has never been greater.

As in the past, Jeannine Markoe Raymond, NASRA’s Director of Federal Relations, joined Leigh Snell, her counterpart at NCTR, to begin the workshop on Monday morning with a brief overview of NCTR and NASRA Federal legislative and regulatory issues for 2011. The top priority was the so-called “Public Employee Pension Transparency Act” (PEPTA), introduced by Congressman Devin Nunes (R-CA) in the House of Representatives (H.R. 567) and Senator Richard Burr (R-NC) in the Senate (S. 347). However, there were also other issues of serious concern that were addressed, including:
  • IRS Normal Retirement Age regulations, currently set to apply to public plans in the first plan year beginning on or after January 1, 2013;
  • possible re-interpretation of Revenue Ruling 2006-43 dealing with employer pick-ups and the application of the ruling to employee elections, whether they be to join a new tier (the so-called “Orange County” issue) or to purchase service credits; and
  • the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rulemaking involving the possible treatment of appointed members of pension boards as municipal advisers.
SEC, Senate Finance Committee and Treasury Presentations

Jeannine and Leigh were followed by a discussion of the SEC and its relationship to the public pension community, presented by Rich Ferlauto, currently the Deputy Director of Policy in the SEC’s Office of Investor Education and Advocacy. Many NCTR members know Rich from his previous role as director of Corporate Governance and Pension Investment for the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME).

All too often, the SEC seems to relate to public pension plans primarily as institutional investors interested in corporate governance issues. Now that he is “on the inside,” Rich was able to provide a candid view of the way in which the SEC understands (1) public pensions in their role as providers of retirement security; (2) the relationship of plans to plan sponsors in the public sector; and(3) how fiduciary duty as applied to public pension trustees operates on more than simply disclosure.

Rich also described the role of his Office and what it can offer public plans, particularly as it relates to trustee education opportunities. He also stressed that when it comes to regulatory proceedings pursuant to the new Dodd-Frank financial markets reform law, plans and other interested parties should feel free to ask for meetings as well as provide written comments on proposals, even if the formal comment period for such has expired.

Rich was followed by a panel discussion featuring Tom Reeder, Senior Benefits Counsel for the Senate Finance Committee and its Chairman, Senator Max Baucus (D-MT). Tom was also the Benefits Tax Counsel for the Treasury Department under the previous Administration. Tom was joined by Michael Kreps, Pensions Counsel for the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) and its Chairman, Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA). Michael was instrumental in arranging for the very well-received January briefing of key Senate staff (on a bipartisan basis) by State and local government officials concerning the state of public pensions that NASRA and NCTR helped orchestrate.

Tom and Michael offered their insights regarding what to expect in 2011 from their two Committees, particularly as it relates to pensions, retirement security, and related issues. While Tom said that the legislation introduced by Senator Burr and referred to the Finance Committee was not currently “on the front burner” for Committee consideration, it was nevertheless still on the stove top. As for the possibility of tax reform, he said that there was much interest in the so-called “tax expenditures” in the Internal Revenue Code, such as the home mortgage interest deduction as well as deferrals associated with retirement savings. Everything will be on the table if tax reform is pursued, he stressed.

Michael said that there was much concern among Senate staff with the press reports of imminent plan failures, and cautioned that all it would take would be a major plan failure to trigger interest by some Senators and their staff in increased Federal regulation of public plans, perhaps along the lines of a Public Employee Retirement Income Security Act (PERISA).

The final presentation of the morning was provided by George Bostick, the Treasury Department’s Benefits Tax Counsel within the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy. As such, Mr. Bostick is responsible for developing and reviewing policy, legislation, regulations, and revenue rulings dealing with all aspects of employee benefits taxation and related matters, including qualified retirement plans such as public pensions.

George and his colleague, Mark Iwry, the senior adviser to the Secretary of the Treasury and Deputy Assistant Treasury Secretary for Retirement and Health Policy, have been very supportive of public pensions, and have devoted literally tens of hours in meetings over the last year with NCTR, NASRA and other public sector representatives on a number of issues, including the Normal Retirement Age regulations, and most recently, the question of the application of the employer pick-up rules generated by a request from Orange County, California, for a private letter ruling to permit current employees to individually elect into a new, reduced tier of benefits.

George has been very willing to listen to public plan concerns with the possible implications of action in the pick-ups area, depending on its nature, with respect to other employee elections, such as the purchase of service credits, and the broader implications that any decisions might have with regard to future plan design decisions. While he was unable to present what the final resolution of this matter might look like, he did indicate the sensitivity of the discussions and the need for action in the near future.

George also touched on a number of other issues, including the IRS governmental compliance initiative, the pending revision of the definition of a governmental plan – it is still “imminent” -- and the status of any final decisions dealing with the normal retirement age issue, including a discussion of the perceived problems in this area pursuant to the pre-ERISA vesting rules, and the likelihood of any possible “grandfathering.”

A Word from the White House

The luncheon speaker was Brian Deese, Deputy Director of the National Economic Council and Special Assistant to the President for Economic Policy. Mr. Deese helps to coordinate policy development on a number of the Administration’s economic priorities including tax policy, retirement security, clean energy and manufacturing, and the auto industry. He was asked to discuss the growing interest in Washington with the operations and funding of public pensions, and the degree to which they are perceived as fitting in with the overall budget picture at the State and local level.

Mr. Deese proved to be very knowledgeable with regard to public pension issues. He assured attendees that the Administration was aware of the concerns with funding, but felt that the issues were long-term in nature and that States were taking appropriate steps to address sustainability. He was asked if he thought that public pensions were sufficiently transparent at the present, and replied that he thought that while the goal should always be to improve transparency, regardless of subject matter, he believed that the current GASB review of public pension accounting and disclosure was the appropriate place for this issue to be decided. He also distinguished between transparency and clarity, observing that the former, which should be the goal, was not always necessarily synonymous with the latter.

A View from the House of Representatives – Past and Present

Following lunch, the next presentation was made by Aharon Friedman, Pensions Tax Counsel to the House Committee on Ways and Means and its Chairman, Dave Camp (R-MI). Mr. Friedman was joined by Michele Varnhagen, Director of Labor Policy for Democrats on the House Committee on Education and the Workforce and a long-time pension adviser to Congressman George Miller (D-CA), the Committee’s Ranking Member.

This panel provided a view of retirement security in general and the PEPTA legislation in particular from the perspective of the House of Representatives and its new GOP majority. Mr. Friedman is very interested in the discount rate used by public pensions, and conversant with arguments on both sides of the issue. However, he said that at the present, Chairman Camp had not yet taken a position on PEPTA, and that there were no current plans to hold hearings on the legislation in the Ways and Means Committee.

Michele touched on what she sees as the future of retirement security from a Federal policy perspective, and raised the on-going concerns of her boss with the adequacy of 401(k) plans as a primary retirement vehicle. She also expressed concerns with the amount of misinformation in the media on public plans, and encouraged NCTR and NASRA members to be sure to educate their Congressional delegations as to the true condition of public pension funding.

The conference wrapped up on a high note with a rousing presentation by Earl Pomeroy, one of the best friends that the public pension community has ever had on Capitol Hill. Mr. Pomeroy lost his campaign to be re-elected last November to his seat in Congress representing North Dakota, and is currently with the law firm of Alston and Bird. He discussed the misinformation campaign surrounding the PEPTA legislation and the problems with what he referred to as “zero-risk” pension funding being advocated by Congressman Nunes and others. He also provided attendees with some inside tips and pointers on how best to get their messages across in Hill meetings. As someone who has heard the arguments and concerns of his former colleagues with the perceived weaknesses of public pension plans, his was a very special and valuable presentation.

The Conference ended at 3:00 PM, and many attendees then went to Capitol Hill to meet with their Congressional delegations. NCTR and NASRA provided new “Getting the Facts” presentation folders that included a fact sheet on public pensions, as well as a recent issue brief discussing the level of state and local contributions to pensions measured as a percentage of state budgets, with a chart showing employer (taxpayer) contributions to pensions as a percentage of all state and local government spending, by state, based on 2008 US Census Bureau statistics. Attendees were encouraged to add information specific to their own plan as part of the package.

US Senator Harkin Addresses NIRS Annual Policy Conference; Says Most Public Pension Plans are "Doing Just Fine"

United States Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA), Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, was the keynote speaker at the second annual National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS) retirement policy conference the day following the NCTR/NASRA Legislative Workshop. Harkin offered support for public pensions, criticizing “unfair scapegoating” by what he referred to as “a vocal group of activists and politicians who are trying to score political points. “ He also spoke of the need for “bold changes” to ensure that the nation’s retirement system works for everyone, with several essentials that mirror the success of public plans’ defined benefit model. Harkin stressed that “the conversation should be about how we can lift everyone up rather than knocking public sector workers down.” NIRS also used its conference to release new public opinion research that finds an overwhelming majority of Americans believe the nation’s retirement infrastructure is crumbling; that stock market volatility makes it impossible to predict retirement savings; and that government needs to do more when it comes to providing pensions for all Americans.

On March 8, NIRS held its second policy conference in Washington, DC, within walking distance of the NCTR/NASRA Legislative Workshop. This year’s NIRS conference was entitled “Policy at the Crossroads: Ensuring Economic Recovery Strengthens Retirement Security,” and focused on whether a rising economic tide will "lift Americans' retirement boats” or if policymakers, plan sponsors, and service providers will need to employ new strategies to restore America's retirement readiness.

Harkin Speech

Senator Harkin, the keynote speaker, referred to hearings he has been holding in the HELP Committee on retirement security, which made it “crystal clear” to him that the current national retirement system is failing many Americans. He said that 401(k) plans aren't doing enough to help families prepare for retirement, with low savings rates and “no simple way for people to convert their savings into a guaranteed stream of retirement income.” The Senator also pointed out that traditional defined benefit private sector pensions are disappearing.

This means that “the only people who really have pensions are public employees,” the Senator said, and the retirement security conversation “should be about how we can lift everyone up rather than knocking public sector workers down.” However, he noted that public plans are under attack, with opponents using “hyperbolic studies with pictures of burned out cities trying to make people think that pension plans are breaking state budgets.”

Harkin pointed out that “The truth is that not every public pension is in trouble.” “Most are doing just fine,” he said. While the Iowa Democrat recognized that a few public retirees are living “high-on-the-hog on the taxpayers’ dime,” he also underscored the fact that the average retirement benefit for a public employee is just $22,600. “And remember,” he reminded attendees, including members of the national press, “that lots of public employees aren’t in the Social Security system, so that’s all they get.”

Harkin said that any policy decisions regarding public pensions should be “based on facts, not unfair scapegoating.” “Let’s not forget who we’re really talking about,” the Senator stressed. “We’re talking about the police officers who put their lives on the line to keep our families safe and the elementary school teachers who make sure our kids know their ABCs.”

Senator Harkin has concluded that there are some “core principles” that he believes the nation’s retirement system needs to serve:
  1. The system needs to be universal and automatic. 
  2. It needs to provide certainty. People “need to know that they are going to get a check for a certain amount every month no matter how long they live, Harkin said.
  3. The retirement system needs to be one of shared responsibility. “Employees, employers and the government all have a role to play,” Harkin underscored, “and it’s patently unfair to make families shoulder the burden alone.”
  4. Retirement dollars need to be professionally managed.
Sounds like a traditional public sector defined benefit plan to me!

Harkin said that he will continue holding hearings on retirement security over the next year to highlight the need for comprehensive reform.

New NIRS Public Opinion Research

In addition to Senator Harkin’s address, another highlight of the conference was the release of a new NIRS report, “Pensions and Retirement Security 2011: A Roadmap for Policymakers,” based on opinion research conducted by Mathew Greenwald & Associates in a nationwide telephone interview of 800 Americans age 25 or older to assess their sentiment regarding retirement and actions Congress and the Administration could take. The data was balanced to reflect the demographics of the United States for age, gender, and income, and the poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5%.

The report finds that nearly 80% of Americans believe leaders in Washington do not understand how hard it is to prepare for retirement in the current economy, with some 83% saying that government should make it easier for employers to offer pensions. Most Americans (81%) believe that Washington leaders need to give a higher priority to ensuring more Americans can have a secure retirement.

Other key findings include:

  • Some 84% of Americans are concerned that current economic conditions are impacting their ability to achieve a secure retirement, with more than half (54%) very concerned. 
  • Americans have low retirement expectations, with only 11% expecting retirement to include leisure, travel, restaurants, and/or hobbies. 
  • Nearly 9 out of 10 Americans believe the retirement system is under stress and needs to be reformed, with more than 80% of Americans believing that the recent economic downturn exposed the risks of America’s retirement system.
  • Some 83% of Americans indicated that those with pensions are more likely to have a secure retirement, and 75% believe the disappearance of pensions has made it harder to achieve the “American Dream.”
In addition to Senator Harkin, conference speakers included Ted C. Fishman, author of China, Inc. and Shock of Gray ; Mark Iwry, Senior Advisor to the Secretary and Deputy Assistant Treasury Secretary for Retirement and Health Policy; former Governor Dick Kempthorne, President & CEO of the American Council of Life Insurers; Maya MacGuineas, President of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget at the New America Foundation; Scott Pattison, Executive Director of the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO); Brian Perlman, Partner, Greenwald & Associates; former Congressman Earl Pomeroy; and Paul Van de Water, Senior Fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

The conference also provided an opportunity to introduce Diane Oakley, the new NIRS Executive Director, who succeeded NIRS’ first leader, Beth Almeida, effective January 18, 2011. Diane was formerly a senior policy advisor on retirement and tax policy issues to Congressman Earl Pomeroy. She also has 28 years of service at TIAA-CREF, where she held several leadership positions including Vice President for Special Consulting Services and Vice President for Associations and Government Relations.

Final Normal Retirement Age Regs for Governmental Plans Still Appear to be in Limbo

It has been almost four years since the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) first asked the question whether normal retirement age under a public plan may be based, in whole or in part, on years of service. The issue was raised in connection with so-called “Normal Retirement Age” regulations that were released in final form in 2007, but whose application to governmental plans has been repeatedly delayed. Progress has been slow in resolving the matter, despite repeated meetings between governmental plan organizations, including NCTR, and the Treasury Department. Now, however, hundreds of determination letter requests are reportedly being held up by uncertainty regarding pending guidance in this area, and pressure is growing to provide a final ruling. Some believe that another extension may be in order, while others think that the matter may ultimately need to be dealt with legislatively.

Background

The so-called Normal Retirement Age(NRA) regulations that the IRS issued in May of 2007 in final form actually deal with the ability of individuals (both public sector and private sector) to receive “in-service” distributions. Generally speaking, the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) permits pension distributions only after a participant terminates employment, or reaches “normal retirement age.” The 2007 regulations, which currently apply to the private sector only, now additionally permit a pension plan to pay benefits to an employee who has not terminated if the employee has attained age 62 – a provision which was contained in the “Distributions During Working Retirement” language of the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (PPA).

With regard to what qualifies as “normal retirement age,” the regulations require that the normal retirement age under a plan be an age that is “not earlier than the earliest age that is reasonably representative of the typical retirement age for the industry in which the covered workforce is employed.”

Several safe harbors are provided. For example, a normal retirement age of at least age 62 is deemed to meet this new “typical retirement age” standard; for plans with normal retirement ages between ages 55 and 62, there will be a presumption that they are acceptable based on a “good faith determination of the typical retirement age for the industry in which the covered workforce is employed that is made by the employer.” (However, private sector employers have indicated this presumption is being interpreted as still requiring proof regarding the typical retirement age for the industry of the covered workforce.) For a normal retirement age that is lower than age 55, there is a presumption that it does not meet the new standard “absent facts and circumstances that demonstrate otherwise.” (For plans where substantially all of the participants in the plan are qualified public safety employees, a normal retirement age of age 50 or later is deemed to meet the new standard.)

In 2007, the IRS also issued Notice 2007-69, underscoring that the new regulations do not provide a safe harbor with respect to a retirement age that is conditioned (directly or indirectly) on the completion of a stated number of years of service. The IRS also requested comments from sponsors of governmental plans on whether “normal retirement age” under such a plan may be based on years of service.

Governmental Plan Issues

There are several problems with the final regulations, whose application to governmental plans has been extended several times and which are now set to apply to public plans in the first plan year beginning on or after January 1, 2013.

  1. All governmental pension plans would be required to specifically define a normal retirement age as an actual age. However, many governmental plans define normal retirement age or normal retirement date as the time or times when participants qualify for unreduced retirement benefits under the plan, which is set forth in State and/or local statutes and may not state a specific age.
  2. Many governmental plans define normal retirement age or normal retirement date often based wholly or partly on years of service. Furthermore, under many governmental pension plans, a participant can reach normal retirement age by satisfying one of several age and service combinations. Sponsors of such plans would find it very difficult to select a single age to be the plan’s normal retirement age. Selecting an age that is higher than the lowest age would likely impair the constitutionally protected rights of the participants to any benefit conditioned on normal retirement. Selecting an age that is lower than the highest age could impact the actuarial cost of the plan.
  3. Governmental pension plans often provide multiple benefit structures and cover multiple employee groups. The use of the term “plan” under the Final Regulations makes it unclear whether such governmental plans will be required to engage in the enormous undertaking of going through state and local governing bodies to unnecessarily fracture governmental pension systems into several smaller “plans” in order to have multiple normal retirement ages or take advantage of the safe harbor relief provided under the final regulations. It is also unclear how “the typical retirement age for the industry in which the covered workforce is employed” would be applied in the diverse public sector setting.
Accordingly, NCTR and NASRA have proposed that governmental plans should not be required to define normal retirement age. For those, however, that do define a normal retirement age or date, such normal retirement age or date should be permitted to be based on age, service, or a combination of age and service. Finally, whether or not normal retirement age or date is specifically defined for a governmental plan, in-service distributions should be permitted when made on or after the earlier of age 62 or the date on which the participant is permitted to receive unreduced benefits under the plan.

Current Status

There have been several meetings with the Treasury Department over the last three years to discuss these regulations and the serious problems they would present for governmental plans. However, there has been little progress to date.

One reason for the delay is that the IRS views the definition of normal retirement age for purposes of governmental plans as “not just [an] issue of application of final regulations” to governmental plans, but also as implicating what they view as pre-ERISA vesting standards (that do apply to governmental plans) that require full vesting upon attainment of normal retirement age.

Therefore, they appear to believe that governmental plans have always been required to specify a definitive age – despite the fact that many governmental pension plans (including those whose sponsors have relied for decades on favorable determination letters) have never defined normal retirement age. As George Bostick , Treasury’s Benefits Tax Counsel, explained to the NCTR/NASRA workshop attendees, there is therefore much research being done currently to better understand how such governmental pension plans, or those with a normal retirement age conditioned on the completion of a stated number of years of service , were initially seen as satisfying the pre-ERISA vesting rules.

Finally, the decision with regard to the NRA also affects the current processing of determination letters from Cycles C and E, which is why some plans that have applied have yet to receive a response. Therefore, the resolution of this issue is highly complex and has implications in a number of areas. It is still unclear at this stage whether an answer will be forthcoming soon, or if there will be yet another extension of the application of the regulations. It may well be that a legislative clarification will ultimately be necessary.

Guidance on Pick-Up Arrangements Under 414(H)(2) May Be in the Works

A number of private letter ruling (PLR) requests reportedly pending before the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) have helped to spur the IRS and the Treasury Department to consider issuing additional guidance on Internal Revenue Code Section 414(h)(2) employer pick-ups under IRS Revenue Ruling 2006-43. The specific issue involves the ability of a governmental defined benefit plan to offer current participants a choice between two benefit formulas, and whether this gives rise to a cash-or-deferred arrangement (CODA) which could result in plan disqualification. There is growing pressure from Capitol Hill and elsewhere for a response to these PLR requests. However, depending on how this question is answered, issues could be raised with the ability to use pick-ups in connection with not just elective tiers but other employee elections/options as well, such as the purchase of service credit and DROP arrangements.

Perhaps the most discussed PLR request related to this issue involves Orange County, California. There, as part of pension reform, a plan was devised whereby newly-hired workers were given the option of choosing a lower defined benefit pension with a government-matched 401(k)-type component. Orange County is seeking permission from the IRS to allow current workers to opt into this hybrid retirement plan as well, which requires lower employee contributions resulting in approximately a 7 percent increase in their take-home pay.

Revenue Ruling 2006-43

IRS Revenue Ruling 2006-43 deals with what actions are required in order for a State or local government employer to "pick up" employee contributions to a qualified plan so that the contributions are treated as employer contributions pursuant to § 414(h)(2) and therefore tax-deferred. It clarifies that in order for employee contributions to be considered made, or picked up, by the employer:
  1. Contributions, although designated as employee contributions, are to be paid by the employer pursuant to formal action taken by the employing unit to provide that the contributions on behalf of a specific class of employees of the employing unit, although designated as employee contributions, will be paid by the employing unit in lieu of employee contributions; and
  2. A participating employee, from and after the date of the “pick-up”, cannot be permitted to have a cash or deferred election right with respect to designated employee contributions. That is, participating employees must not be permitted to opt out of the “pick-up”, or to receive the contributed amounts directly instead of having them paid by the employing unit to the plan.
Based on one reading of this Revenue Ruling, Orange County’s optional defined benefit plan tier for current employees -- because it changes the level of the “picked-up” employee contribution – could be viewed as a prohibited cash or deferred arrangement (CODA) under the plan. The Orange County PLR seeks to determine if the second part of this Revenue Ruling requirement would indeed prevent it from offering its new tier as an individual option to its current employees. That is, would the Revenue Ruling not only prohibit any employee from opting out of the pick-up, but also from making any election that would changes the amount of the employee’s picked-up contribution since it would result in the employee “electing” to have more current or deferred compensation?

The answer to this question, depending upon what it is, or on what circumstances it might be conditioned, could also significantly affect other employee elections in addition to opting into a new benefit tier that has a different employee contribution rate, such as electing to purchase service credit through a salary reduction, or electing a deferred retirement option plan whereby the employee contributions to the plan cease.

A reading unfavorable to Orange County would also appear to overturn past favorable IRS rulings that specifically allowed use of pickups where individual employees make an irrevocable election to have contributions made to a plan on their behalf by payroll deduction. It would also contradict Congressional intent. For example, under the Tax Reform Act of 1997, Congress stated that nothing in the new purchase of service credit provisions were meant to interfere with pickups to purchase service credits. Also, under the Pension Protection Act of 2006, Congress specifically reaffirmed the ability of public employees to purchase service under a plan whereby “a lower level benefit is converted to a higher benefit level otherwise offered under the same plan.”

Current Status

Discussions have been underway with Treasury to address the potential unintended impact of such a reading. For example, any action by Treasury that officially affirms this reading of Revenue Ruling 2006-43, even in part, could raise serious issues for many plans. It could also impact a number of changes being considered by some to enhance sustainability. There is also concern that a proscriptive outline by Treasury of the timing, circumstances, financial condition, etc. under which a new tier or plan can receive picked-up contributions could be interpreted as a one-size-fits-all Federal model that employers are encouraged to follow.

Public plan organizations, representatives and attorneys are currently urging the Service to consider a ruling position with regard to Revenue Ruling 2006-43 that clarifies that a CODA does not include an irrevocable election to prospectively modify contributions or accruals under an existing broad-based qualified governmental defined benefit plan (available to all similarly situated individuals in a reasonably equivalent manner), if made pursuant to any provision of federal, state, or local law (including any administrative rule or policy and any collectively bargained provision adopted in accordance with such law).

However, certain public employee unions – but not all -- are concerned with the implications of the Orange County plan and the temptation it presents to current employees to waive their constitutional guarantees to their current benefits. These unions have urged Treasury and the IRS to follow a strict interpretation of Revenue Ruling 2006-43 and find that individually elected contributions should continue to be excluded from treatment as employer “pick-up” contributions.

There is clearly a feeling at the IRS and Treasury that this is becoming a major political problem. The fact that there is not unanimity as to a resolution of the issue among the various public sector organizations is also viewed as a problem and has likely been a factor in the delayed response. There are also reports that the IRS is considering a very narrowly-drawn, fact-specific PLR that simply recites the facts of the Orange County situation and states that this does not present a CODA.

In any case, it appears that pressure from Capitol Hill for a response to the pending PLR requests means that something is likely to happen sooner rather than later.