Powerful House Democrats are eyeing proposals to overhaul the nation’s $3
trillion 401(k) system, including the elimination of most of the $80 billion in
annual tax breaks that 401(k) investors receive.
House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, D-California, and
Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Washington, chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee’s Subcommittee on Income Security and Family Support, are looking at
redirecting those tax breaks to a new system of guaranteed retirement accounts
to which all workers would be obliged to contribute.
A plan by Teresa Ghilarducci, professor of economic-policy analysis at the
New School for Social Research in New York, contains elements that are being
considered. She testified last week before Miller’s Education and Labor
Committee on her proposal.
At that hearing, the director of the
Congressional Budget Office, Peter Orszag, testified that some $2 trillion in
retirement savings has been lost over the past 15 months.
Under Ghilarducci’s plan, all workers would receive a $600 annual
inflation-adjusted subsidy from the U.S. government but would be required to
invest 5 percent of their pay into a guaranteed retirement account administered
by the Social Security Administration. The money in turn would be invested in
special government bonds that would pay 3 percent a year, adjusted for
inflation.
The current system of providing tax breaks on 401(k) contributions and
earnings would be eliminated.
“I want to stop the federal subsidy of 401(k)s,” Ghilarducci said in an
interview. “401(k)s can continue to exist, but they won’t have the benefit of
the subsidy of the tax break.”
Under the current 401(k) system, investors are charged relatively high retail
fees, Ghilarducci said.
“I want to spend our nation’s dollar for retirement security better.
Everybody would now be covered” if the plan were adopted, Ghilarducci said.
She has been in contact with Miller and McDermott about her plan, and they
are interested in pursuing it, she said.
“This [plan] certainly is intriguing,” said Mike DeCesare, press secretary
for McDermott.
“That is part of the discussion,” he said.
While Miller stopped short of calling for Ghilarducci’s plan at the hearing
last week, he was clearly against continuing tax breaks as they currently
exist.
Savings rate
“The savings rate isn’t going up for the investment of $80
billion,” he said. “We have to start to think about ... whether or not we want
to continue to invest that $80 billion for a policy that’s not generating what
we now say it should.”
“From where I sit that’s just crazy,” said John Belluardo, president of
Stewardship Financial Services Inc. in Tarrytown, New York. “A lot of people
contribute to their 401(k)s because of the match of the employer,” he said.
Belluardo’s firm does not manage assets directly.
Higher-income employers provide matching funds to employee plans so that they
can qualify for tax benefits for their own defined-contribution plans, he said.
“If the tax deferral goes away, the employers have no reason to do the
matches, which primarily help people in the lower income brackets,” Belluardo
said.
“This is a battle between liberalism and conservatism,” said Christopher Van
Slyke, a partner in the La Jolla, California, advisory firm Trovena, which
manages $400 million. “People are afraid because their accounts are seeing some
volatility, so Democrats will seize on the opportunity to attack a program where
investors control their own destiny,” he said.
The Profit Sharing/401(k) Council of America in Chicago, which represents
employers that sponsor defined-contribution plans, is “staunchly committed to
keeping the employee benefit system in America voluntary,” said Ed Ferrigno,
vice president in the Washington office.
“Some of the tenor [of the hearing last week] that the entire system should
be based on the activities of the markets in the last 90 days is not the way to
judge the system,” he said.
No legislative proposals have been introduced and Congress is out of session
until next year.
However, most political observers believe that Democrats are poised to gain
seats in both the House and the Senate, so comments made by the mostly
Democratic members who attended the hearing could be a harbinger of things to
come.
Advice at issue
In addition to tax breaks for 401(k)s, the issue of
allowing investment advisors to provide advice for 401(k) plans was also
addressed at the hearing. Rep. Robert Andrews, D-New Jersey, was critical of
Department of Labor proposals made in August that would allow advisors to give
individual advice if the advice was generated using a computer model.
Andrews characterized the proposals as “loopholes” and said that investment
advice should not be given by advisors who have a direct interest in the sale of
financial products.
The Pension Protection Act of 2006 contains provisions making it easier for
investment advisors to give individualized counseling to 401(k) holders.
“In retrospect that doesn’t seem like such a good idea to me,” Andrews said.
“This is an issue I think we have to revisit. I frankly think that the
compromise we struck in 2006 is not terribly workable or wise,” he said.
On Thursday, October 9, the Department of Labor hastily scheduled a public
hearing on the issue in Washington for Tuesday, October 21.
The agency does not frequently hold public hearings on its proposals.
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