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The Pension Protection Act of 2006:
Key Provisions That Can Affect Your Retirement Savings
On August 17, 2006, President Bush signed the Pension
Protection Act of 2006, the country’s most sweeping
reform of pension laws in 30 years. Many of the Act’s
provisions are aimed at strengthening defined benefit
retirement plans by imposing stricter funding and
disclosure rules and increasing the level of premiums
companies pay to the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation, which insures pension plans.
According to the Wisconsin Institute of CPAs, the Act
also makes permanent many of the retirement provisions
in the Economic Growth and
Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 that were set to
expire after 2010 and includes several new provisions.
The following highlights how the Act expands
opportunities for workers to save for retirement.
Increased contribution limits made permanent.
The 2006 Pension Protection Act permanently extends the
increased contribution limits for IRAs, 401(k)s, and
other qualified retirement plans, as well as catch-up
contributions available for taxpayers age 50 and older,
and certain inflation indexing that will start in 2007.
Automatic enrollment.
To encourage employee participation in 401(k) plans, the
new legislation permits companies to automatically
enroll eligible employees into the company’s 401(k)
plan. Employees need to opt-out if they choose not to
participate.
Investment Advice.
The new law permits providers of 401(k)s, IRAs, and
similar plans to offer personalized investment advice to
account holders. The intention is that this will provide
employees with information for making better retirement
decisions.
Direct deposit of tax refunds into an IRA account.
Under the new Act, taxpayers can direct the IRS to
deposit all or part of their tax refund into an IRA
account held by the taxpayer, or the taxpayer’s spouse
on a joint return.
Saver's credit made permanent.
The new Act makes permanent the Saver’s Tax Credit,
which was due to expire at the end of 2006. The credit
allows eligible low-income
taxpayers who satisfy certain income limits to receive
tax credits as an incentive to save for retirement. The
income limits are indexed for inflation.
Non-spouse beneficiaries.
Starting in 2007, a non-spouse beneficiary of an
employer qualified retirement plan can direct a plan
trustee to transfer your account directly into an IRA.
(In the past, this rule applied only to a surviving
spouse.) As a result, at your death, a non-spouse
beneficiary is not obligated to take a lump sum
distribution that the plan might require and incur
immediate tax. Now, the non-spouse beneficiary can
receive payments over his or her lifetime.
ROLLOVERS FROM Qualified Plans to a Roth IRA.
Starting in 2008, the new law allows direct rollovers
from a qualified company retirement plan, tax-sheltered
annuity, or governmental plan directory to a Roth IRA
and treats the rollover as a Roth conversion. Prior to
2008, funds from an employer retirement plan must be
rolled into a traditional IRA before being converted to
a Roth IRA. Direct rollover is prohibited if your
adjusted gross income is greater than $100,000. (There
is no AGI limit starting in 2010.)
Penalty-free
early distributions for military reservists and public
service employees. For military reservists
who are called to active military duty after September
11, 2001 and before December 31, 2007, the Pension
Protection Act waives early withdrawal penalties on
distributions from IRAs, 401(k)s, and other retirement
plans. Reservists have up to two years after the end of
their active duty to re-contribute the amount withdrawn
without adhering to the regular limits on IRA
contributions. A re-contribution is not deductible. A
refund claim may be made on an amended tax return.
The new law also eliminates the 10 percent
early-withdrawal tax on distributions from a government
defined benefit pension plan to qualified public safety
employees, including police, fire, and EMT employees who
separate from service after age 50.
A CPA CAN HELP
The Pension Protection Act includes a number
of provisions that may impact the way you save for
retirement. Work with a CPA to develop strategies for
making the most of your retirement savings plan.
The WICPA is the premier professional organization for
Wisconsin CPAs, with more than 8,200 members working in
public accounting, industry, government and education.
Please include the CPA credential in source
identification. Like other professionals, certified
public accountants are required to obtain additional
education, take a rigorous exam and become
certified. Please identify all CPAs by including the
credential with their names. This identification
enhances the accuracy and credibility of your reporting.
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Produced in cooperation with the AICPA
©2006 The American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants
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