Automatic Enrollment for 401(k) Plans-April 2015 Newsletter
In This Issue:
- Introduction
- What is Automatic Enrollment?
- Eligible Automatic Contribution Arrangement (EACA)
- Qualified Automatic Contribution Arrangement (QACA)
- “Generic” Automatic Enrollment
- Why Automatic Enrollment?
- Preventing a Test Failure
- Example #1
- Example #2
- Example #3
- Encouraging Savings
- Conclusion
McDonald’s may have been the automatic enrollment pioneer
30 years ago, but it wasn’t until 2008 when the new Pension Protection Act rules
kicked in that it really started to gain serious momentum.
Since that time, articles have regularly extolled the virtues and almost
every new retirement-related bill introduced in Congress has included some
provision designed to encourage more widespread adoption of automatic
enrollment. Unfortunately, with that much attention comes a certain amount of
hype. In this article, we will attempt to separate hyperbole from helpful.
What is Automatic Enrollment?
The “traditional” 401(k) plan is set up so that those who wish to enroll can
and those who do not…do not. But, the default is that an employee does not make
contributions until he or she takes the affirmative step to actually sign up for
the plan.
Automatic enrollment turns that arrangement on its head. When an employee
becomes eligible, he or she is automatically signed up to contribute to the plan
at a pre-determined rate unless he or she makes an affirmative election to
contribute at a different rate or opt out altogether. Depending on other plan
variations, the default rate can be whatever percentage a company thinks makes
sense for its workforce, but a relatively common default is 3% of pay.
Some plans take automatic enrollment one step further by automatically
increasing the default rate at set intervals, for example starting at 3% and
increasing it at the start of each subsequent year. This is usually referred to
as automatic escalation.
There are several flavors of automatic enrollment. The underlying concept is
essentially the same but each one has some unique bells and whistles. Here is a
quick overview.
Eligible Automatic Contribution Arrangement (EACA)
The EACA has a couple of special features. One is that if the default
deferral percentage is applied uniformly to all employees who are eligible for
the plan, the regular deadline to avoid the excise tax on corrective refunds for
a failed Average Deferral Percentage (ADP) test is extended. Rather than 2½
months after the close of the year (March 15th for a calendar year plan), the
due date is pushed to 6 months (June 30th).
A second bell (or maybe a whistle) relates to employees who forget to opt out
of automatic enrollment until deferrals have already been withheld. In an EACA,
those employees have up to 90 days to request a permissible withdrawal to have
those deferrals (adjusted for investment gains or losses) returned to them
rather than being stuck with a small balance in the plan.
Qualified Automatic Contribution Arrangement (QACA)
A QACA combines safe harbor 401(k) features with automatic enrollment. In
other words, the plan is treated as automatically satisfying the ADP test, and
if certain additional conditions are met, the ACP test and the top heavy
requirements. The default deferral percentage for a QACA must start out at no
less than 3% of pay and must automatically increase by one percentage point each
year until it reaches at least 6%. The initial default rate can be set at 6% to
avoid the escalation requirement or escalations can continue past 6%; however,
the default rate can never be more than 10%.
The company must also commit to making a minimum contribution in the form of
a match or profit-sharing-type contribution, both of which must be fully vested
after no more than two years of service. The matching formula must be at least
as generous at 100% of the first 1% deferred by each participant plus 50% of the
next 5% deferred. This yields a match of 3.5% of pay for anyone who defers 6% or
more. The profit sharing option comes in slightly lower at 3% of pay but must be
made on behalf of all eligible employees, including those who do not defer.
“Generic” Automatic Enrollment
This more flexible option allows a plan sponsor greater latitude in that
there is no minimum default deferral rate, no required escalation, no mandate to
apply it uniformly to all participants and no required company contributions.
The trade-off is that it also does not come with any of the special features—no
extended testing deadline, no permissible withdrawals and no testing safe
harbor.
Regardless of which automatic enrollment method is used, all require initial
and ongoing notices to participants. The Department of Labor has also indicated
as long as all the rules are satisfied, implementing automatic enrollment in a
401(k) plan overrides state laws that would otherwise require an employee to
make an affirmative election prior to withholding amounts from payroll.
Why Automatic Enrollment?
Now that we’ve covered the “what,” it is time to discuss the “why.” Although
there may be any number of reasons to consider automatic enrollment, they
generally fall into two broad categories—to prevent a testing failure and/or to
help employees accumulate meaningful retirement savings by encouraging
contributions. Both goals are admirable and automatic enrollment can indeed aid
in both, but it is not a foregone conclusion that it will achieve either goal on
its own. That makes it important to consider some of the details before jumping
blindly into the automatic enrollment waters. Let’s look at a few examples.
Preventing a Test Failure
As a quick review, 401(k) plans are generally required to pass the ADP test
each year. It compares the average deferral rate the highly compensated
employees or HCEs (owners and those earning north of $115,000–$120,000 per year)
to that of the non-HCEs. If the spread is outside of accepted parameters, the
test fails and must be corrected by either returning excess amounts to the HCEs
or making special company contributions (called Qualified Nonelective
Contributions or QNECs) to the non-HCEs.
Rather than focusing on the correction, some companies proactively seek to
increase non-HCE contributions as a way to avoid the failure in the first place.
How better to do that than to automatically enroll employees who aren’t
contributing?
There are several factors to consider, including existing deferral rates, the
default rate required to pass the ADP test and other steps that might already be
in place to encourage employees to contribute. Here are a couple of examples
Example #1
Out of Time, Inc.’s non-HCEs are currently deferring at the average rate of
3.75% due to the company’s recent plan enrollment campaign; however, that
average needs to be 4.25% to pass the ADP test. The company decides its campaign
has not been successful enough, so they decide to discontinue it and implement
3% automatic enrollment instead.
Although some participants who weren’t contributing remain at the 3% default
rate, the scaling back of the enrollment campaign meant that very few new
employees elect to defer any more than the default rate. After a year of
automatic enrollment, the non-HCE average actually decreased to 3.6%, causing
the plan to fail the ADP test by an even greater margin than before.
Example #2
Using the same basic facts as the previous example, Out of Time decides to
increase the default rate to 4.5% in order to achieve their testing goals.
Rather than just applying the default rate to newly eligible employees, they
decide to apply it to current participants deferring below that rate. At the 3%
default, there was a relatively high acceptance rate with only about 25% of the
impacted employees opting out. But at 4.5%, the opt-out rate increased to 30%
and included some folks who were already deferring, causing the overall non-HCE
average to decrease again.
In both situations, automatic enrollment failed to achieve the desired
result, because it was used as a replacement for rather than a supplement to
what the company was already doing.
Another consideration is the cost impact with regard to company matching
contributions. Let’s return to our friends at Out of Time, Inc.
Example #3
The plan fails the ADP test and Out of Time does not want to correct via
refunds. The alternative is to make a $25,000 QNEC on top of the match it
already makes. The company cannot afford to spend the extra money so it explores
automatic enrollment as an alternative.
Based on some projections, a default deferral rate of 3.5% would get the ADP
test to pass; however, using the existing match formula, the additional
deferrals increase the match cost by $30,000, even more than the QNEC that was
too expensive. Although they considered reducing the match formula to control
cost, it was agreed that doing so would cause too many existing participants to
reduce or discontinue their contribution rates.
None of this is to suggest that automatic enrollment cannot be an effective
tool to improve test results, only that it is critical to consider all the
factors and potential unintended consequences rather than assuming it will work.
Encouraging Savings
Use of automatic enrollment in this context is often predicated on the notion
that something is better than nothing and that is certainly true. It can be very
effective at creating savers out of people who would not otherwise set aside
anything for their retirement. However, as with testing issues, automatic
enrollment is not a cure-all for retirement shortfalls.
Using conservative estimates for investment returns, salary cost of living
increases, etc., a participant whose only savings consists of a 3%–6% default
deferral rate throughout his or her working years would likely run out of
savings in their mid-70s. Certainly that is better than not being able to retire
at all; but with ever-increasing life expectancies, these results can leave
retirees with few resources in their later years.
Automatic enrollment is one of numerous tools that can be used to encourage
savings. As employees see their accounts accumulate, they may be more open to
continuing automatic escalation beyond the 6% (or even the 10%) in the QACA
schedule. When they see how even modest deferral increases in their earlier
working years, compounded over time, can lead to sizeable increases in their
projected retirement income, participants may be more likely to put raises and
bonuses into the plan rather than spending them.
Conclusion
Automatic enrollment is here to stay. It is increasingly popular and sooner
or later, it may become the norm in most 401(k) plans. Regardless of the goals
you hope to accomplish, it is important to understand that it often will not
achieve the desired result on its own. However, as part of an overall strategy,
automatic enrollment can be an effective springboard to improve plan operations
and create a culture of savings among employees.
This newsletter is intended to provide general
information on matters of interest in the area of qualified retirement plans and
is distributed with the understanding that the publisher and distributor are not
rendering legal, tax or other professional advice. Readers should not act or
rely on any information in this newsletter without first seeking the advice of
an independent tax advisor such as an attorney or CPA.