Retirement Options For Small Businesses
According
to The Pension & Welfare Benefits Administration, small businesses employ
nearly 40% of the private-sector workforce in the United States. However, a
majority of small businesses do not offer their workers retirement savings
benefits.
If
you’re like many other small business owners in the United States, you may be
considering the various retirement plan options available for your company.
Employer-sponsored retirement plans have become a key component for retirement
savings. They are also an increasingly important tool for attracting and
retaining the high-quality employees you need to compete in today’s
competitive environment.
Besides
helping employees save for the future, however, instituting a retirement plan
can provide you, as the employer, with benefits that enable you to make the most
of your business’s assets. Such benefits include:
Tax-deferred growth on earnings within
the plan
Current tax savings on individual
contributions to the plan
Immediate tax deductions for employer
contributions
Easy to establish and maintain
Low-cost benefit with a highly-perceived
value by your employees
Basic
Types of Plans
Most private sector retirement plans are either defined benefit plans or defined contribution plans. Defined benefit plans are designed to provide a desired retirement benefit for each participant. This type of plan can allow for a rapid accumulation of assets over a short period of time. The required contribution is actuarially determined each year, based on factors such as age, years of employment, the desired retirement benefit, and the value of plan assets. Contributions are generally required each year and can vary widely.
A
defined contribution plan, on the other hand, does not promise a specific amount
of benefit at retirement. In these plans, employees or their employer (or both)
contribute to employees’ individual accounts under the plan, sometimes at a
set rate (such as 5 percent of salary annually). A 401(k) plan is one type of
defined contribution plan. Other types of defined contribution plans include
profit-sharing plans, money purchase plans, and employee stock ownership plans.
Small
businesses may choose to offer a defined benefit plan or any of these defined
contribution plans. Many financial institutions and pension practitioners make
available both defined benefit and defined contribution “prototype” plans
that have been pre approved by the IRS. When such a plan meets the requirements
of the tax code it is said to be qualified and will receive four
significant tax benefits.
The
income generated by the plan assets is not subject to income tax, because
the income is earned and managed within the framework of a tax-exempt trust.
An
employer is entitled to a current tax deduction for contributions to the
plan.
The
plan participants (the employees or their beneficiaries) do not have to pay
income tax on the amounts contributed on their behalf until the year the
funds are distributed to them by the employer.
Under
the right circumstances, beneficiaries of qualified plan distributors are
afforded special tax treatment.
It is necessary to note that all retirement
plans have important tax, business and other implications for employers and
employees. Therefore, you should discuss any retirement savings plan that you
consider implementing with your accountant or other financial advisor.
Here’s a brief look at some plans that can help you and your employees save.
SIMPLE: Savings Incentive Match Plans for
Employees of Small Employers
A
SIMPLE plan allows employees to contribute a percentage of their salary each
paycheck and to have their employer match their contribution. Under SIMPLE
plans, employees can set aside up to $8,000 each year by payroll deduction.
Employers can either match employee contributions dollar for dollar – up to 3
percent of an employees wage – or make a fixed contribution of 2 percent of
pay for all eligible employees instead of a matching contribution.
SIMPLE
plans are easy to set up – you fill out a short form, administrative costs are
low, and much of the paperwork is done by the financial institution that handles
the SIMPLE plan accounts. Employers may choose either to permit employees to
select the IRA to which their contributions will be sent, or to send
contributions for all employees to one financial institution. Employees are 100%
vested in contributions, get to decide how and where the money will be invested,
and keep their IRA accounts even when they change jobs.
SEPs: Simplified Employee Pensions
A
SEP allows employers to set up a type of individual retirement account – known
as a SEP-IRA – for themselves and their employees. Employers must contribute a
uniform percentage of pay for each employee. Employer contributions are limited
to the lesser of 25 percent of an employee’s annual salary or $40,000. (Note:
this amount is indexed for inflation and will vary). SEPs can be started by most
employers, including those that are self-employed.
SEPs
have low start-up and operating costs and can be established using a single
quarter-page form. Businesses are not locked into making contributions every
year. You can decide how much to put into a SEP each year – offering you some
flexibility when business conditions vary.
401(k)
Plans
401
(k) plans have become a widely accepted savings vehicle for small businesses.
Today, an estimated 25 million American workers are enrolled in 401(k) plans
that hold total assets of about $1 trillion.
A
401(k) Plan allows employees to contribute a portion of their own incomes toward
their retirement. The employee contributions, not to exceed $12,000, reduce a
participant’s pay before income taxes, so that pre-tax dollars are invested.
Employers may offer to match a certain percentage of the employees’
contribution, increasing participation in the plan.
While
more complex, 401(k) plans offer higher contribution limits than SIMPLE plans
and IRAs, allowing employees to accumulate greater savings.
Profit-Sharing Plans
Employers
also may make profit-sharing contributions to a plan that are unrelated to any
amounts an employee chooses to contribute. Profit-sharing Plans are well suited
for businesses with uncertain or fluctuating profits. In addition to the
flexibility in deciding the amounts of the contributions, a Profit-Sharing Plan
can include options such as service requirements, vesting schedules and plan
loans that are not available under SEPs.
Contributions
may range from 0% to 25% of eligible employees' compensation, to a maximum of $40,000 per employee. The contribution in any
one year cannot exceed 25% of the total compensation of the employees
participating in the plan. Contributions need not be the same percentage for all
employees. Key employees may actually get as much as 25%, while others may get
as little as 3%. A plan may combine these profit-sharing contributions
with 401(k) contributions (and matching contributions).
Your
Goals for a Retirement Plan
Business
owners set up retirement plans for different reasons. Why are you considering
one? Do you want to:
Take
advantage of the tax breaks, to save more money than you’d otherwise be
able to?
Provide
competitive benefits in addition to – or in lieu of – high pay to
employees?
Primarily
save for your own retirement?
You
might say “all of the above.” Small employers who want to set up retirement
plans generally fall into one of two groups. The first group includes those who
want to set up a retirement plan primarily because they want to create a
tax-advantage savings vehicle for themselves and thus want to allocate the
greatest possible part of the contribution to the owners. The second group
includes those who just want a low-cost, simple retirement plan for employees.
If
there were one plan that was most efficient in doing all these things, there
wouldn’t be so many choices. That’s why it’s so important to know what
your goal is. Each type of plan has different advantages and disadvantages, and
you can’t really pick the best ones unless you know what your real purpose is
in offering a plan. Once you have an idea of what your motives are, you’re in
a better position to weigh the alternatives and make the right pension choice.
If
you do decide that you want to offer a retirement plan, you are definitely going
to need some professional advice and guidance. Pension rules are complex, and
the tax aspects of retirement plans can also be confusing. Make sure you confer
with your accountant before deciding which plan is right for you and your
employees.