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US tax hits deferred payments

Neil Hodge, Financial Director, 29 Nov 2007

US tax rule changes will affect UK employee benefits schemes, which could leave workers with huge tax bills

UK companies that have operations in the US or which employ US citizens in the UK have been slow to get to grips with a US tax rule change which could seriously affect employee benefits schemes.

The rule change means that deferred payments made to employee benefit schemes could leave employees with a huge tax bill just when they wanted to make good use of the money they have been hoarding away for years.

According to Kristian Wiggert, partner at law firm Morrison & Foerster, “employees could find that they will be landed with a sizeable tax bill ­ plus an interest payment ­ to the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) because their employers have not taken into account how their deferred payments, which can include pension entitlements and retirement schemes, will be affected by the tax rule changes that are coming into force.”

Section 409A

Section 409A is a new section of the Internal Revenue Code that deals specifically with non-qualified deferred compensation plans. It was created as part of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, which became law in October 2004 as a response to perceived abuses stemming from the corporate finance scandals of recent years. Section 409A generally applies to amounts deferred after 31 December 2004. However, the rules in 409A would also apply to any amounts deferred prior to that time if a “material modification” is made to the plan after 3 October 2004.

“The legislation impacts virtually all companies that have non-qualified deferred compensation plans,” says Wiggert. “Furthermore, the statute itself is very broad and may affect certain types of arrangements that are not typically considered to be deferred compensation, such as provisions in employment contracts, all kinds of share or stock-related compensation benefits, as well as some pension entitlements, severance benefits, deferred bonuses, and some retirement plans,” he adds.

Wiggert says that section 409A has been described as a “sea change” for non-qualified deferred compensation. “There is little doubt regarding the significance these new rules will have on the design and operation of non-qualified deferred compensation plans and on those who sponsor them. Plan sponsors need to be familiar with the new rules and have the information and resources necessary to implement the changes required.”

In general terms, section 409A is intended:

  • To impose significant restrictions on deferred compensation arrangements of all sorts by limiting the timing of elections to defer compensation by “service providers” (meaning employees, directors, or contractors);
  • To impose significant restrictions on the timing and form of subsequent payments of deferred compensation; and
  • To impose restrictions on the timing of subsequent changes to either.
    Violating any of these broad requirements (or any of the more specific requirements included in the proposed regulations and other guidance) not only triggers income tax on the deferred amounts but also triggers an additional 20% income tax and interest at a prescribed rate.

Transition rule

To ease the transition process from the “pre-409A” world to compliance with the foregoing limitations, the IRS created a transition rule that allows changes to the form and timing of deferred compensation payments that would not otherwise be permissible. In addition to allowing a variety of “409A first aid” for traditional deferred compensation plans, the transition rule has proven invaluable in addressing stock options and stock appreciation rights that have inadvertently become subject to section 409A.

Under the recently-issued Notice 2007-86, operational compliance with the final regulations is now not required until 1 January 2009. In the interim, employers and other “service recipients” are required to operate their non-qualified deferred compensation arrangements in good faith compliance with currently effective guidance and with the terms of those arrangements to the extent they are consistent with section 409A.

As the IRS has noted in prior guidance, a deferred compensation arrangement will not be considered to be operating in “good faith compliance” during the transition period if:

  • Discretion provided by the terms of the arrangement is exercised in a manner inconsistent with section 409A. For example, if an employer exercises discretion under a deferred compensation plan to delay payments in a manner that is not consistent with section 409A, the entire plan will be considered not to have been operated in good faith compliance.

However, a single employee’s use of an impermissible “haircut” provision, for example, will result in a section 409A violation for that employee but not for other participants in the arrangement.

Wiggert says that companies need to act quickly to ensure that full compliance is observed and that employees’ benefit and compensation schemes are protected and in accordance with the new legislation. “Now is the time to review your arrangements that may be subject to section 409 and to determine the necessary steps to bring those arrangements into compliance with the statute,” he warns.

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