About Pension Plans
There are two general types of
pension plans: Defined Benefit Plans and Defined Contribution
Plans. Defined benefit plans provide a specific benefit at retirement
for each eligible employee, while defined contribution plans specify
the amount of contributions to be made by the employer toward
an employee’s retirement account. Under a defined contribution
plan, the actual amount of retirement benefits provided to an
employee depends on the amount of the contributions as well as
the gains or losses of the account.
A cash balance plan is a defined benefit plan where the benefits
are defined in terms that are more characteristic of a defined
contribution plan. The cash balance plan defines the promised
benefit in terms of a stated account balance.
In a typical cash balance plan, a participant's account is
credited each year with a pay credit and an interest credit
(either a fixed rate or a variable rate). Increases and decreases
in the value of the plan's investments do not directly affect
the benefit amounts promised to participants. Investment risks
and rewards on plan assets are borne solely by the employer.
When a participant becomes entitled to receive benefits under
a cash balance plan, the benefits that are received are defined
in terms of an account balance. For example, assume that a participant
has an account balance of $100,000 when he or she reaches age
65. If the participant decides to retire at that time, he or
she would have the right to an annuity. Such an annuity might
be approximately $10,000 per year for life. In many cash balance
plans, however, the participant could instead choose (with consent
from his or her spouse) to take a lump sum benefit equal to
the $100,000 account balance.
In addition to generally permitting participants to take their
benefits as lump sum benefits at retirement, cash balance plans
often permit vested participants to choose (with consent from
their spouses) to receive their accrued benefits in lump sums
if they terminate employment prior to retirement age. Traditional
defined benefit pension plans do not offer this feature as frequently.
If a participant receives a lump sum distribution, that distribution
generally can be rolled over into an Individual Retirement Account
(IRA) or to another employer's plan if that plan accepts rollovers.
The benefits in most cash balance plans, as in most traditional
defined benefit plans, are protected, within certain limitations,
by federal insurance provided through the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
The difference between cash
balance plans and 401k plans.
SEC, NASD and Securities Law Information Center
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of Securities Dealers, the Securities Exchange Commission or
the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.
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