Broad adoption of workplace savings plans for small
employers may require policy changes that encourage small businesses to give
their employees the opportunity to save for their future.
What can we do to solve this problem? Here are five ideas
that Empower Retirement believes can help with this important goal:
1.
Develop a
simplified starter 401(k). Small businesses operate very differently from
their mid- and large-market counterparts. They don’t have the same resources to
manage a workplace savings plan, but they should have access to a simpler
solution that removes administrative burdens. This starts with eliminating
expensive and time-consuming testing and limiting in-service withdrawals, which
reduce the amount of savings available at retirement. This could ease plan
administration and keep the plan healthy by minimizing asset reduction.
2.
Expand
underutilized startup tax credits and make the credits refundable. Small
businesses take time to get off the ground. Profitability, which may be minimal
during the early years, eliminates the value of a nonrefundable credit.
Additionally, the uptake rate of the current credits is low — approximately a
half-million dollars annually.3 We have to increase these tax credits to
improve uptake.
3.
Increase
availability of multiple-employer plans. Small businesses have limited
access to the multiple-employer plan (MEP) system. This is due to the
Department of Labor’s stance that there must be some commonality among MEP
sponsors. Under current IRS rules, a disqualifying event by a single sponsor
can disqualify the entire MEP. This
further discourages adoption.
4.
Establish
designated plan providers to oversee administration of MEPs. A designated
plan provider (DPP) could assume many of the fiduciary responsibilities to
eliminate concerns and fears small businesses have related to this role. The
creation of DPPs would also encourage Retirement Fund service providers to fully engage
in this market.
5.
Create a
regulatory environment that encourages plan adoption and maintenance. Small
businesses need a simple, limited-liability correction process that doesn’t
result in overly punitive penalties or unwarranted windfalls to participants.
Policy makers need to remove the administrative burden associated with
termination and asset distribution of abandoned plans. Providers should be able
to streamline, consolidate and deliver required notices in a manner that
leverages evolving technologies.
Retirement service providers and policymakers should work in
partnership to ensure that all working Americans have access to an
employer-sponsored savings plan. Any one of the proposed ideas could help more
employers provide a retirement plan for their workers. These ideas can also
help us bridge the retirement access gap.
Source: http://blog.empower-retirement.com/five-policy-fixes-to-help-small-employer-retirement-plans/
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