Title: Chapter 7: Money purchase plans
1Chapter 7 Money purchase plans
2The tax law treats money purchase pension plans
as both defined benefit and defined contribution
plans
- They are subject to the minimum funding and
joint and survivor requirements of the tax law
that apply to defined benefit arrangements - Individual accounts must be maintained for
employees, the plans are subject to the annual
addition limits of Section 415 of the IRC, and
they are not subject to the plan termination
provisions of Title IV of ERISA
3The sponsor's financial commitment under a money
purchase pension plan
- The employer agrees to make a fixed contribution
each year for each eligible employee - This contribution is usually expressed as a
percent of pay, although it may be a flat dollar
amount - This constitutes a definite commitment on the
part of the employer and the contribution must be
made each year, regardless of profits, and cannot
be varied except by plan amendment
4Characteristics of mandatory contributions under
a money purchase pension plan
- The plan may require employees to make
contributions in order to participate - These contributions can be made only from
aftertax income - When employees do contribute the contribution
rate is fixed (unlike the typical savings plan
where the employee can choose from among
different levels of participation).
5Sponsor's choices with respect to employee
forfeitures under a money purchase pension plan
- forfeitures which arise when partially vested or
nonvested employees terminate employment may be
used to - reduce employer contributions or
- may be reallocated among the remaining plan
participants
6Are sponsors required to make the investment
decisions for the participants of a money
purchase pension plan?
- As with other types of defined contribution
plans, employees are frequently given a choice of
several investment funds in which to invest their
account balances
7What choice does a participant in a money
purchase pension plan have for the form in which
retirement benefits are received?
- If the employee retires, the employee will have
the option of receiving this account balance in a
lump sum or in the form of monthly installments
8Are employees permitted to receive distributions
from their money purchase pension plan accounts
while still working for the sponsor?
- Unlike conventional profit sharing and savings
plans, a money purchase plan generally cannot
make distributions until the employee has severed
employment
9Arizona Governing Committee v. Norris
- changed the manner in which a participant's sex
was used as a determinant of monthly benefits in
a money purchase pension plan - If a male and female employee were the same age
and had exactly the same amount accumulated under
such a plan, the male employee would receive a
higher lifetime pension than the female employee - Because of this difference in life expectancies,
the actuarial value of the pension, in both
cases, was considered to be the same - In 1983, however, the Supreme Court ruled that
life annuities under an employer-sponsored
defined contribution plan must be provided on a
uniform basis
10If a money purchase plan involves after-tax
employee and matching employer contributions, an
actual contribution percentage test will have to
be satisfied each year
11Are there restrictions on the amount of employer
securities that may be held by a money purchase
pension plan?
- Defined benefit plans are generally prohibited
from having more than 10 percent of their assets
invested in qualifying employer securities - Money purchase plans, even though they are
defined contribution plans, are subject to the
same 10 percent limitation that applies to
defined benefit plans