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If you offer a defined-contribution or defined-benefit pension plan

The employer is generally the one who sets up a pension plan. You can also amend it or terminate it, under certain conditions.

To make the right decisions at the right time, you need to know your rights and responsibilities.

What type of plan does your company offer?

Although the employer's powers and obligations are not very different from one plan type to another, we urge you to be familiar with:

Characteristics shared by both plan types

A written contract registered with Retraite Québec

A pension plan is a written contract under which you and, in some cases, your employees are required to make periodic payments to a pension fund in order to provide your employees with a retirement income.

Plan administration

Defined contribution and defined benefit pension plans are generally administered by a pension committee (the committee is the "plan administrator"). As the employer, you can sit on the committee or by designated by the committee to carry out specific duties.

Attention!

If you plan has less than 26 members and beneficiaries, you can act alone as the plan administrator (if allowed by the plan text). In that case, you have the same duties and obligations as a pension committee.

Employer contributions

The contributions paid into a pension fund are deductible from your taxes. They are also excluded from the calculation of your contributions to other programs such as employment insurance, the Health Services Fund, etc.

If employer contributions vary according to the number of years of employment or credited service, they must be approved by Retraite Québec. The variable employer contributions must meet certain rules.

Protection of the pension fund

You cannot at any time or for any reason take money out of the plan's pension fund. Your creditors cannot touch the fund either. In other words, the pension fund cannot be seized in the event of bankruptcy and it cannot be put up a guarantee for any obligations other than obligations of the plan.

Characteristics specific to defined contribution plans

  • The amount of contributions paid into the pension fund is set in advance.
  • The amount of a member's retirement income depends, among other factors, on the total amount accumulated in the member's account, that is:

    • contributions that you made as the employer
    • member contributions made by the employee (if required to contribute)
    • interest credited to contributions.
  • The risk related to fluctuations in the pension funds rate of return are borne by the members and beneficiaries.
  • Your participation is limited to the contributions that you are required to make under the plan provisions.

Characteristics specific to defined benefit plans

  • The cost of benefits and the contributions to be made to the pension fund are determined by an actuary. Those contributions include both those that you, as the employer, are required to make and those that the members make (if required to contribute).
  • The amount of a member's retirement pension generally corresponds to a percentage of his or her salary, multiplied by the number of years of credited service under the plan.
  • The plan can provide for early retirement or phased retirement measures (or both) to more effectively manage the firm's human resources.
  • As the employer, you are responsible for the plan's funding.

To find out more...

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