The government has proposed reforms to increase the use of voluntary insured occupational pension funds (OPFs) for providing supplemental retirement benefits. The reforms would, among other things, change the tax treatment to encourage the payment of OPF benefits as a pension rather than a lump sum, converge the taxation of OPFs with that of group pension insurance contracts, allow unrelated employers in different sectors to participate in multiemployer OPFs, and streamline regulatory supervision of OPFs as well as the process for establishing them. First established in 2002, 28 single-employer or sectoral multiemployer OPFs are currently in operation, with around 50,000 members and approximately 300 million euros in assets (government data), so an average member account balance of only about €6,000. OPFs are defined contribution arrangements, with each setting the ranges of applicable employee and employer voluntary contribution rates.
Noteworthy proposed changes include the following:
Even though the proposal is still subject to approval and change, employers should review their existing retirement plans in order to assess the potential impact and opportunities the proposed changes would represent. Among companies surveyed by WTW, 56% offer some form of supplemental retirement benefit, most commonly a defined contribution plan arranged with a commercial insurance provider (83% of plans). Employer interest in OPF plans has been constrained in part by the requirement that OPFs have at least 100 members, compared with 10 for group insurance contracts. The creation of non-sectoral multiemployer plans should make the OPFs a more competitive option.