optimal option: suny’s personal retirement plan as a model for pension reform presentation by e.j....

32
Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Upload: charlotte-thompson

Post on 27-Jan-2016

213 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Optimal Option:SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan

As a Model for Pension Reform

Presentation by E.J. McMahonFebruary 16, 2012

Page 2: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Cuomo Tier 6 Proposal

• Higher employee contributions, later retirement, reduced pension multiplier and pensionable salary base restrictions for all defined-benefit pension plans

• Option of defined-contribution plan

Page 3: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

“401(k)s simply do not provide workers with the predictability and reliability of a defined-benefit pension, and on their own are not a viable option to allow workers to retire with dignity.”

-- state AFL-CIO

Page 4: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

“The facts speak for themselves: replacing defined benefit pensions with 401(k)’s will put workers’ retirement security in danger.”

-- Binghamton Mayor Matt Ryan

Page 5: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

“I stand firmly behind my position that defined contribution plans are not adequate for retirement security for public or private workers.”

-- Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli

Page 6: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 7: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 8: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 9: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 10: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 11: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

SUNY Optional Retirement Program

Page 12: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 13: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 14: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 15: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 16: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 17: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 18: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Vesting

Employees in the Unclassified (e.g., UUP and MC-13) service who are full-time; and part-time UUP employees with Term appointments, MC employees who are at least half-time, and employees designated as eligible under local community college contract.

Eligibility

Occurs after 366 days of active service. This period may be waived for employees coming to SUNY with active employer sponsored retirement annuity contracts from one of the SUNY currently Authorized Investment Providers. All contributions will become the property of, and all investments will be directed by, the participant upon vesting.

Page 19: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

•Retirement at any age subject to an IRS 10% penalty for distributions prior to age 59 ½ , unless separating from service after reaching the normal retirement age of 55 •Distributions exempt from the SUNY ORP are exempt from New York State Income Taxes. •Flexible options designed to allow participants to plan their retirement income distribution according to their own individual needs and preferences. Include periodic and systematic cash withdrawals, guaranteed lifetime annuity payments, and a variety of blended options and lifetime annuity dependent survivor payment levels.

Distributions

Page 20: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

SUNY Plan Providers

TIAA-CREFING

METLIFEVALIC

Page 21: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

CUNY Plan Providers

TIAA-CREFGuardian Life

MetLife

Page 22: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Optional DC Plan Advantages:Early vestingPortabilityFlexibilityDeath Benefit

Page 23: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Optional DC Plan Advantages for Worker:

Early vestingPortabilityFlexibilityDeath Benefit

Optional DC Plan Disadvantages for Worker:

Lack of guaranteed incomeLower annual benefit*

* Except for longest-tenured if investment returns are strong.

Page 24: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 25: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Optional DC Plan Advantages for Employers (Taxpayers):

TransparencyPredictabilityAttractiveness to employees

who value career flexibilityOptional DC Plan Disadvantages for Employers

(Taxpayers):

Higher recurring and average cost

Page 26: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 27: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Actual and Projected TIAA-CREFAccumulations and Annuities, SUNY

Page 28: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Cuomo Option Contributions (% Salary):4% Employer + 0% Employee = 4%

Or4% Employer + 3% Employee + 3% Employer =

10%

Recommended:

Employee 4-6% based on on Tier 6 DB scheduleEmployer 6-8% to bring total to 12%

Page 29: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

Plan Design Issues:• Annuity Preference as at SUNY-CUNY•Plan Provider Competition•Fairly Priced Investment Choices•Default to Lifecycle Funds•Fee and Expense Transparency•Consumer Benchmarks (e.g., Brightscope)

Page 30: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012

“401(k)s simply do not provide workers with the predictability and reliability of a defined-benefit pension, and on their own are not a viable option to allow workers to retire with dignity.”

-- state AFL-CIO

Page 31: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012
Page 32: Optimal Option: SUNY’s Personal Retirement Plan As a Model for Pension Reform Presentation by E.J. McMahon February 16, 2012