Panelist Gives PPA Good Review

January 05, 2011 at 07:00 PM
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The Pension Protection Act of 2006 (PPA) has helped retirement savings, a retirement services executive says.

The executive, Jamie Kalamarides, a senior vice president at Prudential Retirement, spoke Tuesday at an economic outlook panel discussion held in New York.

Prudential Financial Inc., Newark, N.J., organized the event.

Topics addressed by Kalamarides and the other four panelists included the general state of the economy; prospects for the bond, stock and currency markets; and the policy adjustments needed in developed and emerging economies.

Kalamarides says PPA has improved the odds that U.S. workers will save enough for retirement.

"The outlook for adequacy…looks quite good," Kalamarides said.

PPA includes provisions for automatic enrollment in 401(k) plans and other defined contribution retirement plans, and automatic escalation of contributions.

Those provisions and others "continue to encourage good investment behavior among plans participants," Kalamarides said.

Kalamarides added that he expects the 112th Congress to give a boost to 401(k) plans by passing a Lifetime Income Disclosure Act bill.

The bill — first introduced in December 2009 by Sens. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., and Herb Kohl, D-Wis. – would require that plan participant statements illustrate the gap between current savings and anticipated future needs.

"Prudential has found that showing the gap between current savings and future needs in a monthly format is the best [way] to get people to increase their savings in the workplace," Kalamarides said. "It's [better] than any other method we know of."

Kalamarides said he also expects the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) to issue a safe harbor ruling modifying the DOL 96-1 opinion, which lets plan sponsors choose a guaranteed minimum withdrawal benefit solution to be a qualified default distribution alternative for 401(k) plans.

This, he said, would improve on current regulations, which allow only payments of cash as a qualified default distribution alternative. He said pre-retirees may be better

served in coming years by placing retirement savings in other vehicles.

Kalamarides also is hoping Congress will create an automatic individual retirement account (IRA) program, to give small businesses a simple, low-cost alternative to offering a 401(k) plan.

"The idea is to allow small employers to pool their purchasing power and use a model plan issued by IRS," he said. "This would dramatically reduce costs for the small employer, mitigate fiduciary risk and dramatically reduce administrative costs."

Kalamarides said the outlook for "business practices" governing advisors and plans sponsors is mixed.

Prudential supports an enhanced fiduciary standard and compensation disclosure requirements for insurance and financial professionals, but to be effective, any federal- and state-mandated business practices must be "clear, concise and actionable," Kalamarides said.

"We're concerned that proposed regulations on the technical side may not be as clear, concise or actionable as we would like," he said. "They end up increasing costs and, at times, cause confusion. Much is good about the proposed regulations. But there is more work to be done."

Turning to pensions, Kalamarides said state and municipal governments face a "special challenge" in restoring to financial health their multi-employer pension plans, many of which are significantly underfunded. Congressional action to aid such plans should be forthcoming in the year ahead, he said.

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