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Qualified
Retirement Plans
For business owners, the funding of a qualified retirement plan is
possibly the best deduction that exists. You get immediate tax
savings benefits since the dollar amount funded can be written off
against your other income. Also, any income made while in the
retirement plan is not subject to current taxes, so the tax-deferral
effect on the compounding of this money over the years can be quite
significant compared to saving outside the retirement plan.
Unfortunately, the majority of small businesses do not take
advantage of this tax saving opportunity. In fact, according to 1997
statistics from the US Census Bureau, only 29% of small businesses
have any form of qualified retirement plan.
The secret is to view a retirement plan as a required business
expense(like rent, insurance, supplies) instead of an optional one.
Otherwise, the tendency is to "put it off" until the cash flow
situation improves. The problem with this thinking is that it seems
to be inherent in human nature to put most optional decisions off
forever!
In any event, it's important for a business owner to have a working
knowledge of the qualified retirement plan options that may be
available. Note that we are discussing "Qualified" plans as opposed
to non-qualified plans. A qualified plan is one that has met a
series of IRS guidelines so as not to be discriminatory in favor of
certain employees/employers.
What Is A Qualified Plan?
This is a written plan which allows contributions for you and your
qualified employees to be deducted when funded, and not taxable
until they are distributed according to IRS definitions of taxable
distributions.
There are numerous qualification rules within this general
guideline, some of which are:
How the contributions and benefits must be calculated
Investment guidelines
within the plan
Who must be covered under the plan
The nature of the vesting requirements
Non-discrimination rules within the plan and involving related,
controlled companies
Prototype Plans: The
rules to ensure a qualified plan can be quite complex–and ever
changing. However, you may elect to use a prototype plan to make it
easier. This is a pre-approved plan by the IRS. These are available
through a number of financial service establishments such as banks,
brokerage houses, trade organizations, insurance companies, mutual
funds, etc. In effect, these "off the shelf" plans have already been
qualified under IRS rules and regulations. As long as you follow the
plan rules, you have a qualified retirement plan to use. Setting one
up is merely a matter of filling out a few documents.
You have a right to set up your own "customized" plan as well. There
are specialists in this field who can advise you on the advantages
and disadvantages of using a customized plan instead of a prototype.
Two of the main reasons for going to a customized plan are: First,
it may allow for a bigger retirement plan deduction, hence larger
current tax savings; Second, it may create more benefits for the
highly compensated individuals than the other employees.
Types of Qualified Plans
According to IRS classification, qualified plans fall into two main
categories: defined contribution plans, and defined benefit plans.
A defined benefit plan works almost in reverse. A qualified defined
benefit plan must provide a set benefit. The contributions to the
plan must equal a certain amount in order to achieve that future
benefit goal. This is based on IRS approved actuarial calculations.
Normally, the defined benefit plan can result in larger
contributions on behalf of the recipients, especially if the
recipients are closer to retirement age. In addition, these plans
usually require the continuing services of professionals such as
actuarial consultants and attorneys.
Because these defined benefit plans are usually quite complex,
involve customization, and are not used by the vast majority of
small businesses, space doesn't permit extensive detail at this
time. Instead, let's review the more commonly used options under the
defined contribution plan guidelines.
Defined contribution plans base the benefits to the recipients on
the amount contributed in their individual behalf. In effect, you
end up getting a retirement distribution which depends on the amount
of contributions and accumulated earnings made within the plan over
the pertinent time frame. The more contributions and accumulated
earnings, the more you'll get. The less contributions and
accumulated earnings, the less you'll eventually get. In effect, the
exact dollar amount of your future retirement benefit is not
guaranteed in advance.
There are three basic types of defined contribution plans: profit
sharing; money purchase; and stock bonus plans.
Profit Sharing: This is the most common type from a
statistical standpoint. The contributions to the plan are based on a
percentage of the profits of the business. You can set the profit
percentage within allowable guidelines. If there are no profits for
any given year, there are no retirement fund contributions. In fact,
for most profit-sharing plans, even if there are profits, you can
usually "elect out" of making retirement plan contributions anyhow.
So this type of plan affords the small business owner more
flexibility than most others. In effect, you can fund the plan or
not in any given year at your discretion.
Money Purchase: With this plan, the contribution is a stated
amount, or a stated formula amount that is not so discretionary as
the profit sharing. It is not based on profits so much as it is on
compensation or earnings. Therefore, retirement plan contributions
must usually be made on a regular basis whenever any qualified
earnings and compensation occur for the given year. In short, this
type of plan locks you in much more so than the profit sharing plan.
Stock Bonus Plan: This is similar to a profit sharing plan
except that company stock is used to fund the retirement plan
instead of money. This option is primarily only available to
corporations.
The Most Common Retirement Plans
Once you have established the kind of qualified plan–defined
contribution vs defined benefit–you select the particular retirement
plan vehicle to implement the plan. This choice depends in part on
the type of business you have (un-incorporated vs incorporated), and
how complicated you elect the plan to be. Listed below is an
overview of the three most commonly-used qualified retirement plan
choices.
Keogh Plan
This is available to sole proprietorships (unincorporated
businesses) and partnerships. Corporations cannot use a Keogh plan.
You do not have to have employees to set this up. In the eyes of the
IRS a sole proprietor is both an employer AND an employee, so the
Keogh can be used whether or not you have employees.
Basically you can put a percentage of the net earnings from the
business into the plan for yourself, and a matching percentage of
your employees taxable compensation. This contribution becomes a tax
deduction for you, and the money earned from the contributions to
the Keogh plan escapes current income taxes. What are these "net
earnings" that are used in the calculation? According to the IRS
definition, net earnings are the gross income minus allowable
deductions from a business in which your personal services are a
"material income producing factor." Thus, in the case of a
partnership, to take a Keogh deduction you must be a "working
partner" as opposed to a limited partner.
Keogh Contribution Amounts: The amount you can contribute for
each plan participant varies according to the type of plan–defined
contribution vs defined benefit. For a defined contribution (the
most common type) the maximum amount per year you can fund is
$30,000. This is subject to further limitations depending on if the
plan is a profit sharing or money purchase and depending on the
compensation/net earnings for the year.
A profit sharing Keogh allows for a maximum of 15%(before
adjustments) of up to $170,000 in compensation adjusted for
inflation. A money purchase allows for a maximum contribution of 25%
of up to $170,000 in compensation.
A defined benefit plan may allow for higher retirement plan
contributions depending on the actuarial calculations set forth
within the plan and the other customized features. However, the
contribution is usually limited to a calculation based on a maximum
defined benefit of $135,000 per year, adjusted for inflation.
A Keogh plan usually requires an annual filing of the details of the
plan and its activities with the IRS. This is a 5500 series filing,
and it can be quite simple or quite complex depending on the type of
plan, and the participants covered.
SEP: Simplified Employee Pension (Previous to the "SIMPLE"
Plan)
As the name indicates, this is a simpler plan than the Keogh in
several ways. First, it is usually simpler to set-up. Second, you do
not have to file complicated annual IRS returns similar to the 5500
return required for a Keogh. In addition, a SEP is available for
corporations as well as unincorporated businesses.
The drawbacks to this plan center around three main issues compared
to a Keogh: The SEP has a more limited allowable contribution amount
per employee; it has stricter rules on which employees can be
excluded from the plan, and how much must be contributed on behalf
of the qualifying ones; and, certain lump-sum income tax averaging
methods are not available like they are in a Keogh. Like the Keogh,
you contribute a percentage of the net compensation/earnings from
the business on behalf of each participant. In this case, however,
the maximum amount you can contribute is limited to the smaller of
either 15%(before adjustments) of the employee compensation/earnings
amount. Like the Keogh, this compensation amount is further limited
to a maximum of approximately $170,000 per year. The net result is
that the maximum SEP contribution per year is usually $25,500 vs
$30,000 for a defined contribution Keogh.
Similar to a Keogh profit sharing plan, employer contributions are
not required each year; they can be at the discretion of the
business owner. So this gives some flexibility from a cash flow
standpoint.
SAR-SEP: Salary Reduction Plan (Previous to the 1997 enacted
"SIMPLE" Plan)
This is an interesting feature that is not available with a Keogh
plan. This is a form of salary reduction or elective income deferral
in which employees can have a part of their pay contributed to the
SEP–and not pay income tax on the amount contributed. This is a
voluntary contribution on their part–not yours as the business
owner–and it can be a significant tax deduction for them. There are
restrictions on this type of arrangement, most notably three: 1) The
business can have no more than 25 eligible employees; 2) At least
50% of the employees make the election; and, 3) highly compensated
employees may be limited in this election depending on various
calculations.
401(k) Plans
This is a form of a qualified profit-sharing plan that allows
participants to make salary reduction or elective income deferral
contributions of up to a maximum of 15% of their qualified
compensation, subject to a cap of $10,500 adjusted for inflation.
The employer can then contribute as well, or not, depending on the
plan. The total annual amount that can be contributed in this way is
$30,000(effective January 1, 1997). This gives the employee a nice
tax deduction in that the money contributed from the employee's
compensation comes "off the top" for income tax purposes. If the
employee makes $30,000 for the year, and has $3500 put into the
401(k) plan, then only $26,500 is subject to federal income tax for
that year.
Some advantages: The business is not restricted to 25 or
fewer qualified employees for this plan. Participants may be able to
borrow a portion of their designated plan contributions and earnings
for specific purposes such as buying a house, education, medical
bills, etc. They then pay themselves back at stated interest rates
and stated time tables to avoid paying tax on this type of
distribution. It is available to nearly all forms of business
organizations. Special 5 year and 10 year lump sum tax averaging
methods may apply to distributions, saving taxes.
Some disadvantages: It is usually complicated to set up, and
administer. IRS reporting requirements can be quite complex. Highly
compensated employees must meet strict non-discriminatory tests to
participate equally.
"SIMPLE" Plan
Effective from January 1, 1997, and on, this new option combines
some of the features of a SEP with a 401(k) to provide what is
supposed to be a simpler plan to set-up and administer, hence the
acronym "SIMPLE".
Basically, it is available to a business with 100 or fewer
employees. The employee can elect to defer from taxes up to $6,000
in compensation in a given year. For the matching provision, the
employer must contribute the lesser of up to 3% of wages, or $6,000.
Supposedly, this SIMPLE plan is easier to set-up and administer than
a 401(k) plan. It is supposed to have more selectivity for the
employer as to which employees must be covered. Also, the
"top-heavy" rules as to contributions and deferral amounts of owners
and/or controlling shareholders/officers are supposed to be much
more lenient than a 401(k) plan. This would be quite an advantage
for owners of small businesses.
However, the SIMPLE plan is relatively new, so some time will be
needed for certain rulings and interpretations to absolutely clarify
(and quantify) this area.
Advantages and Disadvantages Of Qualified Retirement Plans
As you can see, there may be a number of choices when you consider a
retirement plan for your business. The goal is to try to match the
plan choice to your individual business requirements and your cash
flow, both current, and projected down the road.
First, some potential disadvantages, or caveats. The cash flow of
the business is not always predictable, especially years down the
road. Thus, the types of plans where you must commit a certain
amount each year can become burdensome if your business hits some
snags. The money put in retirement in not always available to
withdraw for emergencies or unplanned cash flow problems without
some heavy consequences. Premature withdrawals (if it is even
possible) may create a stiff tax bill and/or tax penalties. Thus, it
requires some serious "crystal ball" analysis, especially if you are
young.
In addition, if your eventual tax bracket when you withdraw the
retirement money is higher than when you made the tax deductible
contributions, the tax saving benefits disappear.
However, a retirement plan can have tremendous advantages. It can
create significant tax write-offs for you, thus reducing your tax
liability. The earnings from the contributions once they are in the
plan can accumulate tax deferred, which accelerates the compounding
effects–and helps you to reach your retirement goal faster.
If you have employees, it is a fringe benefit that can keep you
competitive with other employers, thus reducing your employee
turnover which can be quite a drain on a business.
Finally, if it is handled with a certain attitude, it becomes a form
of "forced savings" thus helping to insure you will have a
retirement nest egg to fall back on. In fact, it is very rare that a
business owner will look back at retirement and say "I wish I hadn't
set up that retirement plan." It's usually just the opposite. Most
retiring business owners lament the fact that they never set up an
adequate retirement plan. After all, it can make a difference
between very happy golden years, and frightening ones.
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