Civil Service Pension Reform: The Experience of the Thrift Savings Plan

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Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Civil Service Pension Reform: The Experience of the Thrift Savings Plan Greg Long Executive Director Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board May 6, 2016 d

Outline of the Presentation The old Federal Civil Servant System and the 1983 Reform The new Civil Servant System and the Role of TSP TSP s Legal Framework and Governance Structures The Design of TSP s Pension Plan The accumulation phase The payout/benefit phase TSP s Performance Conclusions and Possible Lessons 2

Part I. The Old Civil Servant Pension Scheme 3

Key Features of the Old Scheme Traditional salary based Defined Benefit system Accrual rates: 1 ½ % first 5 years, 1 ¾% years 5 to 10, 2% years above 10 Maximum replacement rate of 80% Reference Wage Highest Three Years of Earnings Exempt from Public Social Security System Employee Contribution - 7% with no tax deduction Eligibility for full retirement at age 55 with 30 years service, age 60 with 20 years, 62 with 5 years Price indexation of benefits after retirement

Reasons for the 1983 Federal Pension Reform Part of broader Social Security reforms in 1983 Needed to include federal workers to enhance solvency Cost of old system was perceived as too high in the context of record fiscal deficits in the early 1980 s System was viewed as limiting civil servants mobility and impediment to downsizing of staffing levels Public pensions were seen as more generous than average pensions in the private sector Emergence of defined contribution (DC) plans as an alternative model

Part II. The New Civil Servant Pension Scheme

Contributions to the New Scheme Employee contributions Originally 0.8% of pay for defined benefit component; Raised to 3.1% (2013) and 4.4% (2014 and after) 4.2% of applicable wage base to Social Security Contributions to the new defined contribution plan (TSP) Employer contributions 11-13% of employee pay for defined benefit 6.2% of applicable wages to Social Security 1 5% automatic/matching contributions to the TSP

Civil Servant Benefits under the New Scheme Participation mandatory for all workers beginning service on or after Jan 1, 1984 Three part retirement benefit: Benefit from defined benefit plan at 1%/year accrual rate; increases to 1.1%/year at 30 years of service Benefit from Social Security (mandatory participation) Average replacement rate of 40%, lower for higher income workers Benefit from the TSP (voluntary participation) Survivor and disability benefits remained in defined benefit plan Old workers remained in old system (CSRS); had option to switch to new system (FERS)

Retirement Conditions under the New Scheme Five year vesting period Retirement conditions in new Defined Benefit Plan: Age 55 with 30 years of service; age gradually increased to 57 for employees born in 1970 and after Or age 60 with 20 years of service or 62 with 5 years Same conditions for men and women Retirement conditions in Social Security: Normal retirement at age 65 increasing to 67 Same conditions for men and women Average retirement age is 61

Comparison between the New and Old Schemes Much lower accrual rate in new DB plan (about half) Raised minimum retirement age from 55 to 57 No indexing of benefits for retirees until age 62 Indexing rate less generous than old system Average replacement rates after full career: 40% under new DB plan 40% under Social Security for average income workers Total: 80% for average income workers, equal to old DB plan However, higher income workers get less than 80% under new system due to Social Security formula TSP makes up the difference for higher income workers

The Role of the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) in the New Scheme Provides complementary income, especially for higher income workers Provides tax-favored defined contribution individual accounts Designed to operate on a defined contribution (DC) basis, like US private sector 401(k) plans

TSP Legal Framework and Governance Structure Law establishing TSP provided basis for independence from political influence Independent Board of Directors that governs separate administrative body staffed by civil servants Full asset segregation Amounts belong to participants held in trust in individual accounts Participants have legal ownership under U.S. law and Constitution

TSP Legal Framework and Governance Structure Fiduciary responsibilities Enforceable in the courts Must act prudently and solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries Executive Director and 5 Board members are accountable for all actions Independence of the Board Five Board members appointed by the President & confirmed by Senate 4-year fixed, staggered terms Cannot be easily removed (Do not serve at the pleasure of the President or Congress) Board members appoint the Executive Director

TSP Legal Framework and Governance Structure Budgetary independence Independent budget authority (not subject to White House control) Administrative charges to TSP account balances for all expenses No Congressional appropriations Investment structure Index (passive) investment funds No voting shares in portfolio External asset management

TSP Regulatory Oversight Private pensions supervisory agency (Department of Labor) oversees TSP Performs annual series of audits and issues findings and recommendations Reports to the Board Congressional oversight Hearings Government Accountability Office audits

TSP Administration Lean structure Approximately 240 TSP employees Policy Legal Accounting Oversee operations and IT system Other key functions outsourced through contracts Investment management Record keeping Call centers Participant support (forms processing, notices, etc.)

TSP Administration Payroll function Essential to control data, prevent mistakes Contribution records must balance Accounting controls Individual account plan, need to balance every day Audit Annual internal audit required by law under US GAAPAuditors report directly to Board Computer system Robust computer system essential to proper functioning Run system every night Ever increasing need for IT capacity

TSP Communications Website is now primary communications vehicle Transactions available on-line: investment decisions & some loans; Over 90% of investment transactions online Account balances and statements Voice response system (ThriftLine) Automated account information Some automated transactions Opt out to call centers TSP Publications & Forms Available for download on the website Agency responsibilities to communicate enrollment and retirement information

Part III. TSP: Accumulation Phase 19

TSP Contribution Rules Since 2010, automatic enrollment at 3% contribution rate; in 2015, placed in age-appropriate L Fund Immediate agency automatic contribution equal to 1% of salary Government matches first 5% of employee contributions 100% match on first 3% 50% match on next 2% All employees can voluntarily contribute up to annual limit of $18,000 Over age 50, can contribute an additional $6,000 annually Employees can roll-in qualified money from other plans

TSP Investment Structure Participants choose how to invest their accounts Law requires use of index funds for equity Index funds are designed to follow entire markets Ensures investment management is passive Index funds are low cost Board decided to use indexing for fixed income Prohibition on active public agency involvement in corporate governance Law prohibits direct voting of shares (proxies) Funds and accounts valued each business day

Current TSP Investment Options G Fund Government Securities Specially issued government securities F Fund Corporate and government bond index fund Tracks the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond index C Fund Large capitalization U.S. stocks. Tracks the S&P 500 index S Fund Small to medium capitalization U.S. stocks Tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Completion TSM (Total Stock Market) index I Fund International stocks Tracks the MSCI EAFE index L Funds Lifecycle funds Introduced in 2005

The TSP Lifecycle (L) Funds Lifecycle or target date asset allocation funds Uses 5 TSP core funds Participants decide when they will need their money Farther out time horizons: more aggressive investments, with more equity As horizon date approaches: more conservative investments, with more fixed income Five funds selected Income Fund (for those already withdrawing their accounts) 2020 Fund 2030 Fund 2040 Fund 2050 Fund

Selection of External Asset Managers Board selects appropriate indices Board chooses selection criteria Based on staff recommendations (with expert advice) Minimum criteria used to limit competition to firms that have necessary size, experience Board chooses weight to give to technical factors vs. cost. As criteria become more objective, cost weighting can be greater.

Part IV. TSP: Payout/Benefit Phase 25

Menu of Retirement Products Three options for participants to select (can choose more than one): Lump-sum payment without restrictions Monthly payments from TSP account Life annuity Can transfer certain payments to IRAs or other plans Can leave money in account until age 70 ½ Board voted to pursue legislation to liberalize withdrawal options

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TSP Life Annuities Only an option Not required unless spouse insists 18 different annuity types Single, joint and survivor, etc TSP selects vendor and monitors performance No TSP liability once annuity is purchased Annuity provider competitively procured Insurance companies compete on price Not a popular option in low interest environment

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Death and Disability Benefits Death and disability benefits under main DB plan Additional optional insurance for death or disability available, fully paid by employee Upon death, designated beneficiaries receive TSP account balance If no designated beneficiary, use order of precedence under law Spouse establishes own TSP account with same investment and withdrawal options as active members All other beneficiaries receive direct payment with option to transfer to inherited IRA, if applicable

Part V. TSP Performance 31

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TSP Fund Performance ending December 31, 2015 G Fund F Fund C Fund S Fund I Fund 1 Year 2.04% 0.91% 1.46% -2.92% -0.51% 3 Year* 2.08% 1.93% 15.21% 13.13% 4.80% 5 Year* 2.03% 3.57% 12.63% 10.65% 3.79% 10 Year* 2.94% 4.74% 7.36% 8.03% 3.20% *Annualized L Income L 2020 L2030 L2040 L2050 1 Year 1.85% 1.35% 1.04% 0.73% 0.45% 3 Year* 4.18% 7.30% 8.68% 9.65% 10.48% 5 Year* 3.90% 6.50% 7.58% 8.33% N/A 10 Year* 4.13% 5.41% 5.90% 6.19% N/A 34

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Reasons for the Low TSP Costs 2015 expense ratio was 2.9 basis points (.029% or 29 cents per $1,000 of account balance) Pays for administration of the plan Why costs are low: Use of low-cost index funds Simple plan structure (only 5 investment funds) Huge economies of scale Use of investment manager instead of mutual funds Investment manager maintains only one TSP account; not 4.9 million accounts Individual accounts are maintained in TSP record keeping system Competitive procurement of all functions

Part VI. Lessons Learned 30 years of TSP 37

Key Lessons Independent structure has proven resilient Independence is essential for a civil servant fund Passive investing has provided attractive returns (except during crisis) at low cost with less political risk As participants reach retirement age, we have seen that withdrawal options need to be liberalized 38

Questions?