Cash Balance Plans — A Clearer Future?
PENSION BENEFITS
- Eighth Circuit Reinstates 401(k) Plan Fee Lawsuit Against Wal‑Mart
- IRS Issues 2009 Cumulative List
- Pension Plan Limitations for 2010
- IRS Issues Final Regulations under Code Section 436
- Recent IRS Guidance Addresses Contribution of Unused Paid Time Off, Automatic Enrollment and Tax Notices
- Supreme Court Holds that Pension Plan May Apply a Benefit Formula That Treats Pre-Pregnancy Disability Act Pregnancy Leave Less Favorably Than Other Medical Leave
- IRS Issues Guidance on Suspension of Safe Harbor Nonelective Contributions
- Treasury Department Issues Final Regulations on Automatic Enrollment Plans
- Kennedy v. DuPont: The Supreme Court Makes Life a Little Easier for Plan Administrators
- IRS Issues 2008 Cumulative List
- Pension Plan Limitations for 2009
- Heroes Earning Assistance and Relief Tax Act Adds Benefits for Those in Military Service
- Benefits Quiz
- Supreme Court Rules Defined Contribution Plan Participants Can Sue for Losses to Their Individual Accounts
- IRS Issues Guidance for New Distribution Requirements that Become Effective in 2008
- New Multiemployer Plan Disclosure Requirements — ERISA Section 101(k)
- IRS Issues 2007 Cumulative List
- IRS Proposes Regulations Regarding Automatic Contribution Arrangements
- Final Section 403(b) Regulations: What Plan Sponsors Need to Know
- Pension Plan Limitations for 2008
- IRS Issues Final Regulations Affecting Section 403(b) Plans Covering Employees of Tax-Exempt Organizations, Public Schools and Churches
- Treasury Department Issues Final Regulations under Code Section 415
- IRS Updates Procedures for Opinion, Advisory and Determination Letter Applications
- Contacting Missing Plan Participants — Practical Considerations
- 2007 Final Roth 401(k) Regulations: The Latest Chapter
- Public Safety Employees and the Pension Protection Act of 2006
- DOL Issues Interim Final Rule Relating to the Time and Order of Domestic Relations Orders
- Guidance Issued on Deduction of Contributions to Defined Benefit Plans
- IRS Issues Distribution Guidance in Notice 2007–7
- IRS Issues Transitional Guidance Regarding Divestiture Rights and A Model Notice
- New Notices and Disclosures for Plan Sponsors under the PPA
- Pension Plan Limitations for 2007
- IRS Finalizes Anti-Cutback
Regulations: Heinz and Utilization Test Included - Internal Revenue Service Updates and Expands the Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System
- The Internal Revenue Service Issues a Second Set of Final Regulations Regarding the Disclosure of Relative Values of Optional Forms of Benefit
- The Book on the Roth 401(k) and 403(b) and Why Your Business or Organization Must Have One (maybe)
- The Internal Revenue Service Releases 2005 Cumulative List of Changes
- Two Recent Court Decisions Remind Plans to Exercise Caution in Handling Contested Benefit Claims
- Pension Plan Limitations for 2006
- Relative Value Information Required to Be Included in Certain QJSA Explanations As Early As November 3, 2005
- Treasury Department Issues Proposed Section 415 Regulations
- IRS Issues Proposed Roth 401(k) Regulations
- Revenue Procedure 2005–23 — Internal Revenue Service Guidance for Implementing Heinz Decision
- Use of an Administrative Committee to Address Fiduciary Obligations of a Retirement Plan Sponsor
- 401(k) and 401(m): IRS Issues Final Regulations
- Proposed and Temporary Section 403(b) Regulations of Interest to Tax-Exempt Employers
- Missing Participants
- The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004: Employee Benefits Related Issues
- The Automatic Rollover of Mandatory Cash-Outs: The Department of Labor's Safe Harbor Final Regulations
- Pension Plan Limitations for 2005
- IRS Issues Final 401(a)(9) Minimum Distribution Regulations
- Unanimous Supreme Court Decision Determines That Post-Retirement Plan Amendment Violates ERISA's Anti-Cutback Rule
- PBGC Announces New Participant Notice Voluntary Correction Program
- DOL Addresses Modifications Made to Pre-Existing QDROs
- Revenue Procedure 200425 Extends Remedial Amendment Period Only for Certain Specified Disqualifying Provisions
- New Requirement for Automatic Rollovers of Small Cash-Outs from Qualified Plans: The Proposed Regulations
- IRS Issues Updated Procedures for Waiver of Minimum Funding Standards
- IRS Issues Guidance Clarifying Allocation of Plan Expenses to Inactive Participants
- New Legislation Clarifies Rule on Plan Loans to Servicemembers
- Proposed 401(k) Regulations Include Interesting ESOP Change
- Pension Plan Limitations for 2004
- Recent Court Cases on Cash Balance Plans
- Internal Revenue Service Simplifies and Streamlines the Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System
The recently enacted Pension Protection Act of 2006 ("PPA") provides important new provisions clarifying the legality of cash balance plans and certain other types of "hybrid" retirement plans. In addition, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit issued a recent decision holding that IBM's cash balance plan — and the cash balance formula generally — was not inherently age discriminatory, as participants have alleged with some success in numerous cases. But while Congress and the Seventh Circuit have breathed new life into the cash balance approach, and the IRS has announced that it will finally begin processing some of the 1,200 cash balance plan determination letter applications that have accumulated at Treasury since the Service imposed a moratorium on cash balance plan rulings in 1999, other recent court rulings make clear that pre-PPA cash balance plans are not immune from legal challenges.
The PPA cash balance provisions are generally effective as of June 29, 2005, and the Act expressly provides that no inference should be drawn as to the legality of cash balance plans prior to the effective date. The key provisions are as follows:
- Age Discrimination
The Act establishes that cash balance plans are not age discriminatory, provided that:- interest credits do not exceed a market rate of return (effective for plan years beginning in 2008 or later); and
- a participant's accrued benefit — which the law permits to be expressed as a hypothetical account balance, an annuity payable at normal retirement age, or the current value of the accumulated percentage of the employee's final average compensation — is not less than the accrued benefit of any similarly situated younger employee. In determining a participant's accrued benefit for this purpose, subsidized early retirement benefits are ignored.
- Vesting
A cash balance plan must provide for 100% vesting within three years (effective in 2008). - Wearaway
The Act prohibits wearaway of benefits for cash balance conversions that occur after June 29, 2005, by requiring that a participant's accrued benefit under such a plan be not less than the sum of:- his accrued benefit under the old plan terms for years of service prior to the amendment; plus
- his accrued benefit under the amended plan terms for years of service after the amendment.
In determining the amount of a participant's benefit prior to the conversion, the amount of any early retirement benefit or retirement-type subsidy for the plan year in which the participant retires must be taken into account if, as of that time, the participant has met the age, years of service, and other requirements under the plan for entitlement to the benefit or subsidy.
- No Whipsaw
The Act allows cash balance plans to pay lump sums that are equal to a participant's hypothetical account balance, if the plan so provides. Thus, properly drafted plans will not have to perform a whipsaw calculation prior to paying out lump sum benefits. This provision takes effect on August 17, 2006.
The Seventh Circuit decision in Cooper v. IBM Personal Pension Plan and IBM Corporation on August 7, 2006¹, gave cash balance plan advocates even more reason to smile. The court reversed a lower court ruling that had held that the essential cash balance plan formula discriminates on the basis of age because younger participants who remain in the plan longer will necessarily receive more interest credits than will older participants who are closer to retirement age, and therefore the older participants' "rate of benefit accrual" was reduced because of age. The Seventh Circuit categorically rejected this reasoning and concluded that the key statutory term "rate of an employee's benefit accrual" referred to what an employer put in to the plan each year for a participant's benefit, and did not refer to the amount that the participant would receive upon retirement, after many years of accruing interest credits. Any difference in "accrued benefit" for two participants who were exactly alike except for age could only be attributed to the time value of money which, the court held, was not illegal.
While the Cooper decision was written by the influential chief judge of the Seventh Circuit, Frank H. Easterbrook, in his uniquely accessible style, the fact that it is binding only on courts within the Seventh Circuit (comprising Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin) was made clear by a decision this fall from a federal district court in New York. While Judge Easterbrook had written that "rate of benefit accrual" referred to "inputs" by the employer — and therefore a plan that provided the same initial input for similarly situated employees (but for age) did not discriminate when the time value of money resulted in a greater benefit for the younger employee — Judge Harold Baer of the Southern District of New York reached precisely the opposite conclusion in In re J.P. Morgan Chase Cash Balance Litigation,² and wrote that "rate of benefit accrual" refers to "outputs from the Plan," i.e., the rate at which a participant accumulates retirement benefits, expressed as an annuity payable at normal retirement age. Because "outputs" were necessarily lower for older employees, who did not have as many years to retirement in which to accumulate interest credits, Judge Baer held that the J.P. Morgan Chase plan violated ERISA's anti-discrimination provision. Until other circuit courts, or the U.S. Supreme Court, clarify the issue, sponsors of pre-PPA cash balance plans will have to contend with uncertainty about whether their plans violate ERISA's anti-discrimination provision.
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¹ 457 F.3d 636
² 2006 WL 3063424
Copyright © 2006 Trucker Huss. All rights reserved. This article is published as an information source for our clients and colleagues. The article is current as of the date shown above, is general in nature and is not the substitute for legal advice or opinion in a particular case. In response to new IRS rules of practice, we inform you that any federal tax information contained in this writing cannot be used for the purpose of avoiding tax-related penalties or promoting, marketing or recommending to another party any tax-related matters in this writing.

