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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:GGD-98-23</classification>
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 <subject>Retirement benefits</subject>
 <subject>Federal employee retirement programs</subject>
 <subject>Investments</subject>
 <subject>Eligibility criteria</subject>
 <subject>Retirement pensions</subject>
 <subject>Non-government enterprises</subject>
 <subject>Comparative analysis</subject>
 <subject>Employee retirement plans</subject>
 <identifier>Federal Employees Retirement System</identifier>
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<titleInfo>
 <title>Private Pensions: Plan Features Provided By Employers That Sponsor Only Defined Contribution Plans</title>
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<abstract>Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the general features
of defined contribution (DC) plans in the private sector, focusing on:
(1) eligibility requirements for employee participation; (2)
arrangements for employer and participant contributions; (3) eligibility
requirements for employee rights to accrued benefits; (4) employee
investment options; (5) loan and other provisions for participant access
to plan assets while still employed; (6) options for withdrawal of
benefits upon separation or retirement; (7) the six features for the
Thrift Savings Plan; and (8) a summary of the explanations provided in
retirement literature and by pension experts on why employers might
decide to sponsor more than one pension plan for the same groups of
employees.&lt;p/&gt;GAO noted that: (1) the designs of DC plans for the 3,297 employers with
100 or more employees that sponsored only single-employer plans in 1993
varied greatly with respect to eligibility requirements, contribution
arrangements, accrual of benefits, investment options, loan provisions,
and withdrawal options so that no single plan design could be identified
as representing a typical DC plan; (2) the employers reported that they
generally established eligibility requirements that their employees must
satisfy to participate in their plans; (3) ninety-seven percent of the
3,297 employers provided for employer contributions to the plan rather
than requiring participants to fully fund their own pensions; (4)
employers generally did not include enough information in their summary
plan descriptions to allow GAO to determine the maximum potential cost,
or liability, of making employer contributions, expressed as a
percentage of compensation; (5) although by law participants have always
owned their own contributions (and earnings on those contributions) to
DC plans, employers have often established minimum service requirements
that participants were required to meet before they could own, or become
vested in, employer contributions to the plan; (6) the employers used
vesting requirements that generally required fewer years of service for
employees to own matching contributions, as compared with non-matching
contributions; (7) a significant portion of the employers did not
specify in their summary plan descriptions whether participants could
direct how the contributions made to their accounts were invested,
although the subset of larger employers were more likely to so specify;
(8) nearly two-thirds of the employers reported providing plan
participants access to a portion of their account balances prior to
separation from employment; (9) nearly all the employers allowed
participants to take their account balances as a lump-sum distribution
when they retired; while two thirds allowed participants to withdraw
their accounts in even installment payments over a specified period of
time, and nearly half provided for an annuity that would produce a
regular monthly payment for the rest of the participant&apos;s life; and (10)
according to pension experts, and pension-related literature, private
employers design their pension programs principally to control costs,
maximize federal tax incentives, and comply with the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1994, as amended, while at the same time
structuring their compensation and benefits to support their overall
business and financial goals.</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO/GGD-98-23</identifier>
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<note>Letter Report</note>
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 <searchTitle>GAO/GGD-98-23; Private Pensions: Plan Features Provided By Employers That Sponsor Only Defined Contribution Plans;
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<subject>
 <topic>Retirement benefits</topic>
 <topic>Federal employee retirement programs</topic>
 <topic>Investments</topic>
 <topic>Eligibility criteria</topic>
 <topic>Retirement pensions</topic>
 <topic>Non-government enterprises</topic>
 <topic>Comparative analysis</topic>
 <topic>Employee retirement plans</topic>
 <topic>Federal Employees Retirement System</topic>
 <topic>Federal Thrift Savings Plan</topic>
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