2021 Could See More Retirement and Health Legislation
Despite political partisanship that has marked much of the 116th Congress in 2019 and 2020, there have been some notable exceptions with bipartisan outcomes. The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act of 2019 proved that cooperation is a possibility. That legislation, enacted in December 2019, made significant enhancements to tax-advantaged savings arrangements.
Enactment of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act in March 2020 was a unified response to the pandemic that has disrupted many Americans’ lives in both economic and health terms. And, in December 2020, Congress was able to put aside differences in crafting legislation combining additional pandemic relief with needed last-minute federal agency appropriations.
What 2021 will bring is yet to be determined. The Democratic majority in the House of Representatives narrowed in the 2020 general election, and control of the U.S. Senate shifted to Democratic control by the narrowest of margins. A Democrat also now resides in the White House. His legislative agenda has yet to be revealed in detail, but—based on campaign messaging—may include the broadly-defined goal of “equalizing benefits across the income scale.” This ambition aside, it can be difficult for any president to accomplish legislative objectives with such a narrowly divided Congress.
Unless, that is, these objectives align with those of a majority of lawmakers. Fortunately, tax-advantaged savings legislation has a history of being able to gather bipartisan support. It has win-win dimensions that tend to unify, rather than divide. For this reason, there is optimism that one or more savings-focused bills could be enacted in 2021. Several introduced during the past two years will likely be re-introduced in the 117th Congress.
Securing a Strong Retirement Act
This legislation—called SECURE 2.0 by some, in reference to 2019’s SECURE legislation—is a further example of bipartisanship. It is jointly sponsored by House Ways and Means Committee Chairman, Representative (Rep.) Richard Neal (D-MA)— and GOP Ranking Member Kevin Brady (R-TX). Due to the prominence of these sponsors, the legislation is considered to have favorable prospects. It includes the following provisions.
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Require employers—with exceptions for certain new and small businesses—to establish an automatic enrollment deferral-type retirement plan, such as a savings incentive match plan for employees of small employers (SIMPLE) IRA plan.
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Provide an enhanced small employer plan start-up tax credit for such new plans.
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Enhance the “saver’s credit” for IRA contributions and for deferral-type employer plan contributions, such as those made to a SIMPLE IRA plan.
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Exempt up to $100,000 of accumulated IRA and employer-sponsored retirement plan assets from required minimum distribution (RMD) calculations.
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Increase the RMD onset age from 72 to 75.
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Reduce penalties for RMD failures.
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Provide a second (age 60), higher IRA catch-up contribution limit.
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Index IRA catch-up contributions for inflation.
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Increase the limit for IRA and retirement plan assets that are exempt from RMD calculations under qualifying longevity annuity contract (QLAC) rules.
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Reduce certain IRA error penalties and permit more self-correction.
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Permit matching contributions, e.g., to SIMPLE IRAs—based on student loan payments.
Automatic IRA Act
It is widely accepted that up to 40 percent of American workers do not have access to a workplace retirement plan. A concept that dates back more than a decade proposes universal, automatic saving to an IRA through a worker’s place of employment, if no other retirement plan is available. This is the concept embodied in the Automatic IRA Act, legislation that has been introduced in several previous sessions of Congress.
In the absence of action at the federal level, many states have acted on their own to establish automatic IRA-based saving programs, which—while beneficial for those who are covered—has left geographic gaps, and a patchwork with differing program rules. A uniform national automatic IRA program could close these gaps and address differences.
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Employers in business less than 2 years or employing fewer than 10 employees would be exempt.
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Employees would be automatically enrolled and contributions withheld from pay, but they would be able to opt out.
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Accounts would be Roth IRAs unless a Traditional IRA was elected.
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Contributions would likely begin at 3 percent of pay, but with latitude to range between 2 percent and 6 percent.
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Investments would include balanced, principal preservation, and target-date funds, as well as guaranteed insurance contracts.
Past sponsors of automatic IRA legislation have included Rep. Richard Neal (D-MA) and U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI).
HSA Enhancements
Affordable health insurance for Americans continues to be an extremely challenging goal. One increasingly common option—an alternative to the comprehensive “major medical” health insurance model—is a high deductible health insurance plan linked to a savings and spending account known as a health savings account, or HSA.
This approach is intended to offer a path to lower health insurance premiums, and to allow individuals to save in a tax-advantaged manner for expenses that are below their health plan deductible, and for co-pay amounts they owe. What initially began as a temporary test program under medical savings account (MSA) nomenclature later evolved into the HSA we know today.
With many U.S. employers offering employees an HSA-based program as one—or perhaps the only—health insurance option, much focus has been on how the HSA might be tweaked to improve its usefulness. Following are some of the proposed HSA modifications, a composite of provisions from several bills introduced in the 116th Congress. Some, or all, could be proposed again in the 117th Congress that has just been sworn in.
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Increase maximum annual HSA contributions; some have proposed doubling the limits.
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Expand the treatments for which a plan’s high deductible need not be met before benefits commence, such as chronic care services and more medications, including nonprescription drugs.
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Permit care at onsite employer or retail clinics without forfeiting HSA contribution eligibility.
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Treat costs of participating in a fixed-fee primary care arrangement as HSA-eligible expenses.
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Allow coverage of offspring under a parent’s HSA-compatible health plan to age 26; would mirror the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
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Define ACA bronze-level and certain catastrophic health insurance plans as HSA-compatible.
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Treat a defined portion of HSA accumulations spent for “fitness and health” as HSA-eligible expenses.
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Allow a fixed amount from health flexible spending accounts (health FSAs) and health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs) remaining at year’s end to be rolled over to an HSA.
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Allow Medicare-eligible individuals enrolled only in Part A (Medicare-provided hospital care) to remain HSA contribution-eligible.
Other Legislative Ambitions
Beyond the possibilities noted above, other initiatives that may be in play in the 117th Congress could include getting closer to universal availability of 401(k)-type workplace retirement plans and addressing the solvency of under-funded defined benefit pension plans. These could be more contentious, carrying as they might the stigmas of “mandate,” and “bailout,” both of which draw resistance from a substantial number of lawmakers.
Stay tuned for more details on proposed legislation and regulatory updates that stand to impact the savings plan landscape. In the meantime, check out our latest analysis on industry and regulatory news here on ascensus.com.