Qualified
Retirement Plans Glossary
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401(k) plan
A defined contribution plan that permits employees to deduct a portion
of their salary from their paycheck and contribute to an account before
taxation. Employers may also make contributions to a participant’s
account, called a company match. Federal (and sometimes state) taxes
on contributions and investment earnings are "deferred" (ie.
postponed) until the participant takes money out of the plan in a distribution
(typically at retirement).
403(b) Plan
Also known as a tax sheltered annuity (TSA), a 403(b) provides a tax
shelter for 501(c)(3) tax exempt employers (which include public schools).
Employers qualifying for a 403(b) plan may defer taxes on contributions
to certain annuity contracts or custodial accounts.
Accrued Benefits
Retirement benefits earned to date by an employee, which will be expressed
in a 401(k) plan in terms of the amount in the employee’s account.
Actual Deferral Percentage (ADP)
An anti-discrimination test that compares the amount deferred by highly
compensated employees to the deferrals of non-highly compensated employees.
Asset Allocation
An employee’s division of money between different types of investment
choices. An example of asset allocation would be 70 percent stocks and
30 percent bonds.
Alternate Payee
A person other than a plan participant (such as a spouse, former spouse,
child, etc.) who, under a domestic relations order (see qualified domestic
relations order), has a right to receive all or some of a participant’s
pension benefits.
Annual Audit
Federal law requires that all plans with more than 100 participants
be audited by an independent auditor. It is also common to refer to
a DOL or IRS examination of a plan as a plan audit.
Annual Report
A document filed annually (Form 5500) with the IRS that reports pension
plan information for a particular year, including such items as participation,
funding, and administration.
Annuity
A contract providing retirement income at regular intervals. See also
qualified joint and survivor annuity.
Automatic Deferral Default Percentage
The percentage of pay that is taken pre-tax and put into a plan when
an employee is enrolled via an automatic enrollment feature. The typical
automatic deferral default percentage is 3 percent of pay. Participants
can generally choose to defer an amount other than the default percentage.
Automatic Enrollment
The practice of enrolling all eligible employees in a plan and beginning
participant deferrals without requiring the employees to submit a request
to participate. Plan design specifies how these automatic deferrals
will be invested. Employees who do not want to make contributions must
actively file a request to be excluded from the plan. Participants can
generally change the amount of pay that is deferred and how it is invested.
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Beneficiary
A person, persons or trust designated to receive the plan benefits of
a participant in the event of the participant’s death.
Blackout Period
Also called a lockdown, transitional period or quiet period. This refers
to the time when plan participants cannot access their accounts. These
periods can be caused by a number of events, including a change in plan
record keepers, a change in plan trustees, a change to daily valuation
from monthly valuation, or a company merger or acquisition.
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Cafeteria Plan
In this plan employees may chose from a "menu" of two or more
benefits.
Cash-Out
The distribution of assets from a plan to a participant prior to retirement,
typically occurring when a participant has a balance under $5,000 and
leaves a company without requesting to have their assets rolled over
into an IRA or into a new employer’s plan. Cash-outs are subject
to federal withholding tax, and are subject to the ten percent early
withdrawal federal income tax penalty if taken before age 59½.
Cash or Deferred Arrangement (CODA)
A type of profit sharing or stock bonus plan in which employees may
defer current pre-tax compensation.
Cash or Deferred Election
A participant request to defer compensation, on a pre-tax basis, to
a CODA Plan.
Cash Profit Sharing Plan
A type of profit sharing plan in which the company makes contributions
directly to employees in cash or stock. (This type of profit sharing
plan is not a qualified retirement plan.)
Cliff Vesting
A vesting schedule that gives an employee 100 percent ownership of company
contributions after a specified number of years of service. (See also
vesting.)
Common Control
Businesses are under common control when one entity owns at least 80
percent of the stock, profit, or capital interest in the other organization,
or when the same five or fewer people own a controlling interest in
each entity.
Conversion
The process of changing from one service provider to another.
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Deferred Profit Sharing Plan
A type of qualified retirement plan in which the company makes contributions
to individual participant accounts.
Deferral
A pre-tax contribution set aside from an employee’s paycheck.
Defined Benefit Plan
A retirement plan in which the sponsoring company provides a certain
guaranteed benefit to participants based on a pre-determined formula.
Defined Contribution Plan
An employer-sponsored plan in which contributions are made to individual
participant accounts, and the final benefit consists solely of assets
(including investment returns) that have accumulated in these individual
accounts. Depending on the type of defined contribution plan, contributions
may be made either by the company, the participant, or both.
Department of Labor (DOL)
The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) deals with issues related to the
American workforce – including topics concerning pension and benefit
plans. Through its branch agency the Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration,
the DOL is responsible for administering the provisions of Title I of
ERISA, which regulates proper administration of plans.
Disclosure
Plan sponsors must provide access to certain types of information for
participants, including summary plan descriptions, summary of material
modifications, and summary annual reports.
Determination Letter
Document issued by the IRS formally recognizing that the plan meets
the qualifications for tax-advantaged treatment.
Discrimination Testing
Tax qualified retirement plans must be administered in compliance with
several regulations requiring numerical measurements. Typically, the
process of determining whether the plan is in compliance is collectively
called discrimination testing.
Distribution
Any payout made from a retirement plan. See also lump sum distribution
and annuity.
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Early Withdrawal Penalty
There is a 10 percent early withdrawal federal income tax penalty for
withdrawal of assets from a qualified retirement plan prior to age 59½.
This 10 percent early withdrawal federal income tax penalty is in addition
to regular federal and state tax (if applicable).
Eligibility
Conditions that must be met in order to participate in a plan, such
as age or length of service requirements.
Eligible Employees
Employees who meet the requirements for participation in an employer-sponsored
plan.
Employee stock ownership plan (ESOP)
A qualified, defined-contribution plan in which plan assets are invested
primarily or exclusively in the securities of the sponsoring employer.
ERISA
Plan sponsors are required by law to design and administer their plans
in accordance with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA). Among its statutes, ERISA calls for proper plan reporting and
disclosure to participants.
ERISA Rights Statement
ERISA requires that this document, explaining participant and beneficiary
rights, be included within a summary plan description (SPD).
Excess Accumulations
The amount that a participant’s required minimum distribution
(after age 70½) surpasses the amount distributed. When distributions
reach 50 percent above the minimum, they may be taxed.
Excess Aggregate Contributions
After-tax participant contributions or matching employer contributions
that cause a plan to fail the 401(m) actual contribution percentage
(ACP) non-discrimination test.
Excess Contributions
Pre-tax participant contributions that cause a plan to fail the 401(k)
actual deferral percentage (ADP) non-discrimination test.
Excess Benefit Plan
A plan, or part of a plan, maintained to provide benefits that exceed
IRS Code 415 limits on contributions and benefits.
Excludable Employees
The employees that may be excluded from the group being tested during
401(k) nondiscrimination testing. The following are excludable employees:
certain ex-employees; certain airline pilots; non-resident aliens with
no US source of income; employees who do not meet minimum age and length
of service requirements; and, employees whose retirement benefits are
covered by collective bargaining agreements.
Exclusive Benefit Rule
A rule under ERISA that says the assets in an employee account may be
used for the exclusive benefit of the employee and his/her beneficiaries.
Expense Ratio
The percentage of a fund's assets that are used to pay its annual expenses.
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Facts and Circumstances Test
The test determining whether financial need exists for a 401(k) hardship
withdrawal.
FICA
The Federal law that taxes employee wages for Social Security and other
programs.
Fidelity Bond
Protects participants in the event a fiduciary or other responsible
person steals or mishandles plan assets.
Fiduciary
A person with the authority to make decisions regarding a plan’s
assets or important administrative matters. Fiduciaries are required
under ERISA to make decisions based solely on the best interests of
plan participants.
Fiduciary Insurance
Insurance that protects plan fiduciaries in the event that they are
found liable for a breach of fiduciary responsibility.
Forfeiture
Plan assets surrendered by participants upon termination of employment
before being fully vested in the plan. Forfeitures may be distributed
to the other participants in the plan or used to offset employer contribution.
Form 1099R
A form sent to the recipient of a plan distribution and filed with the
IRS listing the amount of the distribution.
Form 5500
A form which all qualified retirement plans (excluding SEPs and SIMPLE
IRAs) must file annually with the IRS.
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Graduated or Graded Vesting
A vesting schedule in which the employee earns the right to employer
contributions gradually over a period of years, for example 25 percent
ownership each year for four years. (See also vesting.)
Guaranteed Investment Contracts (GICs)
Accounts that are invested in interest-bearing contracts purchase directly
from banks, insurance companies, or mutual funds, which guarantee to
maintain the value of the principle and all accumulated interest. Also
called stable value funds, these accounts do not go down in value.
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Hardship or In-Service Distribution
When a participant withdraws plan funds prior to retirement, at the
employer’s option. Eligibility for such distributions exists when
financial hardship is present. These distributions are taxable as early
distributions and are subject to a ten percent early withdrawal federal
income tax penalty if the participant is under age 59½.
Highly Compensated Employees (HCEs)
An employee who received more than $90,000 in compensation in 2002 (indexed
annually) or is a 5 percent owner in the company.
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Individual Retirement Account (IRA)
Personal retirement vehicles in which a person can make annual tax deductible
contributions. These accounts must meet IRS Code 408 requirements, but
are created and funded at the discretion of the employee. They are not
employer sponsored plans.
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
This branch of the U.S. Treasury Department is responsible for administering
the requirements of qualified pension plans and other retirement vehicles.
The IRS also worked with the DOL and the PWBC to develop Form 5500,
and is now responsible for monitoring the data submitted annually on
Form 5500 reports.
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Keogh Plan
A qualified defined contribution plan permitting self-employed individuals
to contribute a portion of their earnings pre-tax to an individual account.
KSOP
A plan arrangement that includes both 401(k) contributions and an ESOP.
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Leased Employee
An individual employed by a leasing organization that provides contract
services for the company for the period of more than one year.
Lump-Sum Distribution
The distribution at retirement of a participant’s entire account
balance within one calendar year due to retirement, death or disability.
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Matching Contribution
A contribution made by the company to the account of the participant
in ratio to contributions made by the participant.
Material Modification
A change in the terms of the plan that may affect plan participants,
or other changes in a summary plan document (SPD).
Median Market Cap
An indicator of the size of companies in which a fund invests.
Money Market Fund
A mutual fund seeking to generate income for participants through investments
in short-term securities.
Money-Purchase Plan
A type of defined contribution plan in which the employer’s contributions
are determined by a specific formula, usually as a percentage of pay.
Contributions are not dependent on company profits.
Multi-Employer Plan
A pension plan to which more than one employer contributes, and which
is maintained according to collective bargaining agreements.
Mutual Fund
An account with a broad range of investment options, each of which are
diversified, reducing the risk to the participant.
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Named Fiduciary
The plan document must name one or more fiduciaries, giving them the
authority to control and manage the operation of the plan. The named
fiduciary must also be identified as a fiduciary by a procedure specified
in the plan document.
Nondiscrimination Rules
IRS rules that prohibit the plan or plan sponsor from giving disproportionately
larger benefits to highly compensated employees (HCEs). Specific nondiscimination
testing must be done to determine if plans have broken this rule and
are top heavy.
Nonelective Contribution
An employer contribution that cannot be withdrawn or paid to the employee
in cash. This contribution is neither a matching contribution or an
elective contribution.
Non-Highly Compensated Employees (NHCEs)
Employees who are not highly compensated. Generally, they are employees
who earned less than $90,000 in 2002 (indexed for inflation). See highly
compensated employees.
Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plan
A plan subject to tax, in which the assets of certain employees (usually
highly compensated employees) are deferred. These funds may be reached
by an employer’s creditors.
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