Workers receive an ongoing lifetime income estimation from Social Security, and now they will from employer-sponsored plans as well.
The Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) announced an interim final rule that will help workers determine their ability to retire by allowing them to estimate how their current savings in a 401k-type plan might translate into lifetime monthly payments.
The rule comes as part of the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act of 2019.
The SECURE Act, signed into law by President Trump, amended the pension benefit statement requirements. Plan administrators will show participants equivalents of their retirement savings as monthly income under two potential scenarios—first, as a single life income stream, and second, as an income stream that factors in a survivor benefit.
“Our goal is to help workers and retirees understand how savings translate to retirement income,” EBSA’s Acting Assistant Secretary Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson said in a statement. “Defined contribution plan savings are meant to stretch across the years of retirement. When workers are reminded of what their balances could mean in terms of an estimated monthly dollar amount, they can use this information to plan both savings and spending.”
How it works
Under the interim final rule, retirement plans would provide lifetime income illustrations using prescribed assumptions designed to give savers a realistic illustration of how much monthly retirement income they could expect to purchase with their account balance.
Retirement plans also will provide explanations about what the lifetime income illustrations mean, and the assumptions used to calculate the illustrations.
To help ease the administrative burdens on plan administrators, the interim final rule includes model language that may be used for these explanations.
Plan fiduciaries that use the regulatory assumptions and the model language prescribed by the rule will qualify for liability relief and will not be held liable in the event participants are unable to purchase equivalent monthly payments.
The interim final rule will be effective 12 months after the date of its publication in the Federal Register. The interim final rule includes a 60-day comment period. The Department will use comments to improve the rule before its effective date.
With more than 20 years serving financial markets, John Sullivan is the former editor-in-chief of Investment Advisor magazine and retirement editor of ThinkAdvisor.com. Sullivan is also the former editor of Boomer Market Advisor and Bank Advisor magazines, and has a background in the insurance and investment industries in addition to his journalism roots.