Defined Contribution Plans

A defined contribution pension plan is an individual
account plan. Annual additions to a participant’s account are based on
the formula contained in the plan. Retirement benefits are based on the
value of the accumulation in the account and investment performance
directly affects the value of retirement benefits. The employer’s
commitment is to make annual contributions, not to provide benefits. The
following are examples of different types of Defined Contribution Plans:
Profit Sharing Plan
This represents a pro rata allocation based on
compensation. Unless a budget for a lesser amount has been requested, this
is illustrated at 25% of compensation, the legal maximum.
Integrated Profit Sharing Plan
Integration of profit sharing plan contribution
allocations is a process of correlating the benefits or contributions
under a plan with those under a government program. Plans can be
integrated with various federal and state programs, the most common being
Federal Social Security Benefits.
This study illustrates the integration level at the
Taxable Wage Base (TWB). The TWB is the base salary amount, indexed
annually by the Social Security administration, upon which the employer’s
Social Security obligation is determined. If the integration level is
equal to the TWB, the disparity can be no more than 5.7%.
Age-Weighted Profit Sharing Plan
Current regulation allows defined contribution plans to
be tested for nondiscrimination by reference to the benefits their
allocated contribution represent. Accordingly, there is procedure for
converting these allocations in equivalent life annuity benefit amounts.
The general test is then performed using benefit accrual rates based on
those annuity amounts expressed as a percentage of compensation.
The conversion procedure translates, for each
participant, the amount allocated under the plan to an equivalent annuity
amount. This is accomplished by advancing the allocation to a selected
retirement age at an assumed rate of interest, compounded annually, and
the dividing the result by a straight life annuity factor appropriate to
that age. The testing age definition, the assumed rate of interest, and
the assumptions implicit in the life annuity factor must be the same for
all participants. For the interest rate assumption there is a mandated
rate of 7.5% to 8.5% inclusive (the higher the interest rate, the more
biased the allocation to the older employees’ favor).
New Comparability Profit Sharing Plan
Because this plan allocation is the most complex in the
profit sharing illustration, much jargon is used to describe the testing.
We have therefore determined that along with the brief description, we
should provide you with the actual testing methodology.
1. Determine Equivalent Benefit Accrual Rates (EBAR’s)
of all employees. This projected annual benefit at age 65 as a
percentage of current salary assuming the current year’s allocation
for each employee is projected to retirement using acceptable IRS
interest and mortality assumptions.
2. Determine if the plan passes the "average
benefits percentage" test. This is done by finding the ratio of
the average benefit (EBAR) of the Non-Highly Compensated Employees (NHCEs)
to the average benefit of the Highly Compensated Employees (HCEs).
This ratio must be equal to or greater than 70% for the plan to pass.
If the plan does not pass the test, it must be redesigned or it will
be considered discriminatory. If the plan passes, the system proceeds
to Step 3.
3. Determine the concentration of NHCEs for the
plan. This is found by dividing the number of NHCEs in the plan by the
total number of employees in the plan. Once this concentration
percentage is found, determine the midpoint of the safe and unsafe
harbors per the chart in IRC Section 410(b).
4. Divide the plan into rate groups. The
number of rate groups is equal to the number of HCEs. A rate group
exists for each HCE in the plan and consists of that HCE and all other
employees (both HCE and NHCEs) in the plan who have an EBAR equal to
or greater than the HCE’s EBAR.
5. Determine if each rate group passes the ratio
percentage test. The ratio percentage compares the number of
participants rather than the amount of benefits. The test is performed
by dividing the ratio of NHCEs (number of NHCEs in rate group divided
by the number of NHCEs in the plan) by the ratio of HCEs (number of
HCEs in the rate group divided by the number of HCEs in the plan). To
pass the test, the ratio of NHCEs to the ratio of HCEs in each group
must be a percentage equal to or exceeding the midpoint of the safe
and unsafe harbor percentages found in Step 3.
6. If all rate groups pass the ratio percentage
test, the plan as a whole passes the nondiscrimination testing of the
regulations for IRC Section 401(a)(4). If one or more of the rate
groups fail the ratio percentage test, the plan will be considered
discriminatory and must be redesigned.
401(k) Plan
A 401(k) plan may be stand-alone or a feature of a
profit sharing or employer stock ownership plan. A 401(k) feature allows
eligible employees the choice between receiving certain amounts in cash or
directing the sponsoring employer to contribute these amounts to the
qualified plan. Once contributed to the plan, these amounts are fully
vested. The employer may also make a matching contribution based on the
amount that the employees contribute and/or a profit sharing contribution.
Distributions or withdrawals are strictly regulated. The 401(k) must
operate in a non-discriminatory manner, not favoring the Highly
Compensated Employees.
Defined Benefit Plans

A defined benefit plan is not an individual account
plan. It is a plan that promises to pay a certain benefit at retirement.
The benefit payable to an employee is based on a formula set forth in the
plan that often considers both length of service and compensation. The
annual contribution is determined by an actuary based on factors such as
employee years to retirement, compensation and investment earnings. The
commitment of the plan sponsor is to satisfy funding requirements to
provide retirement benefits. If the plan is fully funded, no contributions
may be required. The employee does not bear investment risk.