Hundreds of thousands of service members face a critical decision during the next year that could have a huge impact on their future financial security: Whether to opt into the new military retirement system or stick with the traditional one.
Signed into law in November, the new retirement benefit will mean smaller pension checks but include cash contributions to the individual investment accounts of all troops. It's the biggest change in decades for military compensation. For the first time, the military will offer some limited retirement benefit, similar to 401(k) contributions, to troops who separate before reaching 20 years of service. Historically those non-career service members — more than 80 percent of the force — received no retirement benefit.
Officially the new retirement system takes effect Jan. 1, 2018. After that, all troops coming out of boot camp will be automatically enrolled in the new benefit as the traditional pension plan is phased out.
Yet for today’s troops, and anyone who joins during the next two years, the new law includes a grandfather clause that will allow them to choose to remain under the traditional all-or-nothing retirement system.
The Defense Department plans to roll out a force wide education program later this year to give troops the details on the new benefits and also provide financial literacy training to help them make key decisions like how much personal basic pay to allocate to retirement savings accounts and where to invest it.
Despite years of skepticism, the new benefit looks like a potentially good deal for many of today’s younger troops and the Pentagon expects thousands of service members to voluntarily waive their right to stick with the traditional system.
There’s an immediate incentive: Troops who opt in will begin receiving matching contributions — ranging from 1 percent to 5 percent of monthly basic pay — into their portable individual investment account that they own outright after just two years of service.
The new system caps years of heated debate over the future of military retirement. And the final outcome is vastly different from the initial proposals that would have eliminated the fixed-income pension entirely and gutted the real value of the benefit. Those proposals sparked outrage and were ultimately rejected by the Pentagon as a major risk to retention and readiness.
In fact, the new system does not really save much money for the Defense Department. Most of the reduced spending on smaller pensions will be offset by the cash contributions for the vast majority of the rank-and-file force.
“It’s an incredibly generous deal,” said Mackenzie Eaglen, a military personnel expert at the American Enterprise Institute. “By and large this is the establishment of a generous new benefit for a wide swath of people who were never going to get it in the past,” she said.
Offering a side-by-side comparison of the two retirement systems is difficult because it hinges on big variables, such as future stock market returns and the extent to which individual service members contribute their own pre-tax money to their retirement account and are in turn able to draw on the matching government contributions.
Troops who entered military service before 2006 are not eligible for opting into the new system and, generally speaking, for those troops who have already clocked many years in uniform and are well on their way to reaching the 20-year retirement threshold, the new system is not very attractive because they have far fewer years to accrue monthly cash contributions and let those grow over time.
Yet for troops who are early in their careers, especially the several hundred thousand who are first-term enlistees or junior officers, the question is more complex, experts say. “This decision likely will depend on service members’ answers to several questions. First, and most importantly, what is the likelihood that the service member will make the military a career and stay at least 20 years?” said Jim Grefer, a military personnel expert at the Center for Naval Analyses. “Service members who are unlikely to stay to 20 years of service clearly would be better off under the new system,” he said.
For individuals who strongly believe they will remain in uniform for 20-plus years, exercising the grandfather clause and staying with the traditional benefit package might make more sense, he said.
They should focus on several key questions:
“Are they willing to sacrifice current spendable income by making contributions to their TSPs from their own pockets? And are they willing to accept the market risk inherent in TSP-type retirement accounts?” Grefer said. “If the answers are no, then they likely should stay in the current retirement system,” he said.
Here are the details:
Under the new retirement system, military pensions will shrink by 20 percent, but otherwise will function the same as the current system, with the pension earned after 20 years of active-duty service and checks payable immediately upon separation.
Troops will receive a “continuation pay” upon reaching 12 years of service if they agree to a new four-year service agreement. Continuation pay will vary by career field but will be at minimum equal to 2.5 months of basic pay. These funds will be paid as cash, so service members can spend it — or invest it — as they wish.
The Defense Department will create an individual investment account, known as a Thrift Savings Plan, for all recruits showing up at boot camp. Troops will automatically receive monthly deposits equal to 1 percent of their basic pay. They can select an investment fund and hope to accumulate market gains and interest over time as financial markets grow.
Ownership of the TSP accounts will be handed off to the individual troops after reaching two years of service. Troops will be given incentives to contribute their own money to the retirement account. Specifically, the Defense Department will offer a dollar-for-dollar match to individual contributions up to an additional 3 percent of pre-tax basic pay.
For troops opting to contribute 3 percent of basic pay, the Pentagon will contribute 4 percent, which would be the initial 1 percent automatic contribution plus a 3 percent match. That means troops contributing 3 percent would sock away monthly pre-tax contributions equal to 7 percent of basic pay.
Additionally he Defense Department will match at 50 cents on the dollar troop contributions beyond 3 percent, up to 5 percent. So to receive the maximum possible retirement benefit, troops should contribute 5 percent of their own basic pay and receive a 5 percent matching contribution from the government.
Troops are permitted to contribute more of their own money, but the government match is capped at 5 percent. For those contributing to a TSP, there is the added benefit of reducing their taxable income. However, because the TSP offers investment funds, not specific stocks, standard maintenance fees apply, and they will vary from fund to fund. Money deposited into a TSP is generally subject to a 10 percent penalty if withdrawn before the owner reaches age 59½. Taxes are deferred on contributions, payable upon withdrawal of funds.
Deadlines. It all kicks off Jan. 1, 2018. That's when the Defense Department will begin distributing monthly retirement account contributions to recruits arriving at boot camp as well as to troops already in the ranks who opt into the new system.
Opting in will require signing some basic paperwork. Those troops who joined the military before January 2018 will automatically remain under the current system unless they seek the authorization forms for opting in. Current plans call for giving current troops a 12-month window for opting in, so the last chance to sign up to participate in the new benefit will be late December 2018.
Old bonuses. The law that fundamentally changes the retirement benefit is intended to dovetail with the longstanding system of special and incentive pays.
Re-enlistment bonuses for specific career fields, combat pays and special incentives for high-demand skills such as proficiency in foreign languages or medical specialties will continue to be a key device for the services to retain talent and shape the force. “The new system isn’t meant to dislodge the existing ‘S and I’ pays,” said James Hosek, a military personnel expert with the Rand Corp. whose research contributed to the development of the new retirement system.
Despite the pension’s reduction, its total value will continue to serve as an incentive for midcareer service members to stay in uniform. “The retirement benefit at 20 years of service is still substantial. It’s still a major draw,” Hosek said.
Lump sum. Among the biggest changes to the retirement benefit is a new option for troops leaving after 20 years of service to receive part of their pension benefit in the form of a “lump sum” cash payout.
Retiring service members will have the option of receiving their retirement benefit in the traditional form of monthly pension checks. Or, they can opt to receive 25 percent or 50 percent of that benefit in a cash payout upon separation in exchange for future years of reduced pension payments. (The lump-sum option reduces monthly pension checks only through the traditional retirement age, typically age 67, at which time all retirees will receive the full monthly pension benefit).
The lump-sum option in some ways will resemble today’s “Redux” retirement option, in which troops can receive a $30,000 cash payment in exchange for reduced lifetime pensions. In most cases, the lump-sum payout will, after taxes, be worth less than $100,000.
Yet the precise amount of the lump-sum payments remains unclear. They won’t be calculated by simply adding up the face value of pension payments. Rather, the calculations can rest upon a "discount rate," a device that financial professionals use to measure the current value of future payments.
Discount rates assume money today is more valuable than money tomorrow — akin to reverse interest rates, shaving money from the current value of a future benefit. The higher the discount rate applied, the lower the value of the lump sum payment today.
The law Congress passed leaves the details up to the Pentagon, which will face a big decision to make in setting that discount rate, one that will add or cut hundreds of thousands of dollars from individual troops' lump-sum options. “That is going to be the largest point of contention. It’s rife with missteps,” said one defense official.
A key question is whether different service members will be offered different rates. Studies show enlisted troops are more eager to get money up front and therefore will accept a much bigger hit from the discount rate. But does that mean the DoD will take advantage of that and offer a better discount rate to officers?
If, hypothetically, studies show that the “grunts” in the combat arms career fields are willing to take the lump sum with a higher discount rate, will the Pentagon use that to craft the formal retirement benefits program and offer those troops smaller lump-sum retirement payouts?
“Do you split it by age? By pay grade By MOS?” the official said. Critics of the lump-sum payout plan compare it to “pay-day lenders” and say it exploits individuals’ desire to have cash now at the expense of long-term financial benefit.
An independent panel on military compensation initially floated the idea in a report to Congress in January 2015. The panel suggested it was a good option for retiring troops who want to buy a home, start a business or help send a child to college.
Last year the Defense Department officially opposed the idea of a lump-sum cash payout, saying it was not a good deal for troops in most scenarios. The idea was first floated by the Military Compensation and Retirement Modernization Commission in a report to Congress last year.
Defense Department officials can kick that can down the road for a few years because it’s unlikely that anyone will be completing their career and actually retiring under the new system for at least another 10 years.
Some defense officials are quietly hoping that Congress will revisit the new retirement law and eliminate that piece of the benefit package before any troops have an opportunity to exercise it. “If we can get rid of it at some point it would be ideal,” the defense official said.
Troops who opt into the new retirement system will face an array of new variables and decisions. What are the best investment fund options for a TSP account? How will financial markets impact the growth of retirement accounts? How much will the 12-year continuation pay actually be? Is the lump-sum option worth considering?
“It can be very complicated. But it can also come down to some very simple decisions, like contributions,” said Beth Asch, a personnel expert with RAND. “There are certain rules of thumb," she said. "Like if there is a match, do it."
Article from Military Times
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