Auditing Employee Benefit Plans. Josie Hammond
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СКАЧАТЬ after-tax contributions. These are contributions that an employee can make via payroll deductions. The contribution is subject to income tax but not the interest accrued within the plan until distributed. They must be fully vested and can be withdrawn, if the plan permits. They are subject to a similar nondiscrimination test as pretax contributions, a test referred to as the average contribution percentage (ACP) test. When withdrawn from the plan, the participant pays tax only on the earnings on these contributions.

       Matching contributions. These are additional amounts based on a formula that the employer may choose for such contributions. They may be subject to deferred vesting and some restrictions on withdrawal.

       Nonelective contributions. Employers may decide to make this contribution irrespective of any employee election or contribution. They are generally allocated based on employees’ salaries; but the allocation formula may take into account age, years of service, Social Security, or other nondiscriminatory factors. They may be subject to deferred vesting and the same restrictions on withdrawal as matching contributions.

       Roth 401(k) contributions. Salary is contributed on an after-tax basis and neither the participant contributions nor the related earnings will be taxable upon distribution, as long as certain tax rules are satisfied. For plan operations, a Roth 401(k) contribution is treated the same as an employee elective pretax contribution, except that some kind of a separate accounting or tracking is required to recognize the distinct tax status of future distributions. Roth contributions are subject to the ADP test, just like employee elective pretax contributions. These vary from regular after-tax contributions because upon withdrawal, both the contribution and any earnings escape taxation, and because they are subject to the ADP test and not the ACP test, as would be the case with other after-tax employee contributions.

      These contribution types may have different names with a particular plan document. They may be referred to as discretionary, elective, nonelective, profit sharing, safe harbor, and so on. It is important that the auditor be able to distinguish the type of contribution, whether required or discretionary, and how each is to be accounted for under the plan.

      403(b) plans are employee savings plans similar to 401(k) plans. They are sponsored by churches, charitable organizations, and public schools. Employees are allowed to make voluntary pretax, voluntary after-tax or Roth contributions. Employers can make matching contributions or discretionary contributions. 403(b) plans have different eligibility standards and different allocation limit testing, and employee voluntary pretax and Roth contributions are not subject to the average deferral percentage test. Instead of an average deferral percentage test, employee pretax and Roth contributions are subject to universal availability.This means that nearly all employees must have the right to participate in the plan and they must be actively notified of that right. There are some exclusions from participation for students, persons hired to work fewer than 20 hours per week, and so on. There are no design-based exclusions for the employee contribution. There can be design-based exclusions for any employer contribution. Any employer contribution is subject to nondiscrimination testing, including the average contribution percentage test, just like employer contributions to a 401(k) plan.

      Like qualified retirement plans, 403(b) plans are required to be documented in writing. The documentation, however, does not have to be a single document, but it must reflect all of the operating requirements of the plan. As a result of the changes in the plan’s operations created under the final IRS regulations effective in 2009, a 403(b) plan now functions a lot like a 401(k) plan, with a few notable differences. The main difference is in the discrimination testing, as described previously. Other key differences include

       an additional catch-up contribution provision for long-service employees, separate from the age 50 catch provision provided for 401(k) and 403(b) plans;

       the right to continue employer contributions to the plan for five years following severance of employment;

       a limitation on allowable investments for most plans to insurance annuity contracts or shares in regulated investment companies;

       the absence of a trust. 403(b) investments must be held by insurance companies or in a custodial account (which does not have the same protective features as a trust) and, as such, may be exempt from ERISA’s general requirement that plan assets be held in trust.

      457 plans

      Like 403(b) plans, these arrangements involve employee pretax contributions. The funded version of these plans is available only to governmental agencies. These plans are not subject to ERISA. They are also not the subject of this course, as their reporting is controlled by GASB, not FASB. There is also an unfunded version of the 457 plan available to certain tax-exempt employers, but such plans are also exempt from the audit requirement and, thus, outside of the scope of this class.

      Employee stock ownership plans

      These are stock bonus plans that are required to be primarily invested in “qualifying employer securities.” There is no clear definition of “primarily,” but it was generally understood to be more than 50 percent of plan assets on average over the life of the plan.3 In contrast, there is guidance on the definition of a “qualifying employer security.” Subject to some special rules for securities acquired prior to 1979, a “qualifying employer security” is any publicly traded security of the sponsor or its parent; or, for a nontraded security, it is a common stock possessing both the best dividend rights and the best voting rights of any outstanding common stock or a preferred stock convertible into such СКАЧАТЬ