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77 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1999)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0074 and id is 1 raw text is: March 10, 1999 No. 77
ADMINISTRATIVE FEES NO
BARRIER TO PERSONAL
RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS
Questions have been raised about the technical
feasibility of substituting privately administered
personal retirement accounts
for some or all of Social
Security's retirement benefits  [Cloneerns h
system.  Particular concerns   about the adm
have been expressed about the   au thent
administrative  and   fund     managem
management costs attached to   private retirem
private retirement accounts.   concerns are
Such concerns are easy to
remedy. They do not justify
retaining centralized administration of personal
retirement accounts or investment of contributions
by the Social Security Administration, as some have
suggested.
Some Social Security reform proposals would

ive b
inistr
Costs
ient a
masy to

Consequently, suggestions have been made that the
collection of contributions and the record-keeping
should be left, centralized, in the hands of the
Treasury and the Social Security Administration
(SSA), and that only the investment of the funds
should be privatized. (Having Social Security invest
the funds directly is too great a threat to the free
market to consider that option.)
In the first few years of any retirement account,
the accumulated contributions and the investment
income are small. During that time, a fixed dollar
administrative and management fee (perhaps $50 a
year) might absorb a substantial portion of the
earnings. This is particularly true if the worker is a
low-wage earner, and if the contributions are
restricted by law to a limited percent of income.
The same fee would offset a smaller percentage of
the investment earnings of a
higher-paid worker.1 For all
een expressed      participants, the fees would
ative and fund     gradually become insignificant
attached   to    as the accounts grow larger
ccounts. Such      over time.
i-emedy.               A flat administrative fee
makes economic sense because
it costs as much to process a
$10 deposit as a $1000 deposit, or to mail an
account statement for a small account as a large
account.  Instead of flat fees, however, many
financial institutions employ a sliding fee schedule
that shifts some of the administrative costs from
small accounts to large ones (or from early years of

let workers set aside (or carve
out) 2, 3, 5, or 10 percentage
points of their payroll tax in
mandatory personal retirement
accounts in   exchange  for
reductions in future Social
Security retirement benefits.
The less generous of these
percentage carve-outs would
lead    to   very    small
contributions that might not

They do

be economical for

private  sector financial institutions to   handle.

not justify

retaining

last for many years,

an account to later years).
Mutual funds go further, and
charge a flat percent of assets
with no cap.   This enables
them to keep the rate very low,
a few tenths of a percent in the
cheapest funds.  Institutions
undercharge  small  account
holders to build up a business
relationship that they hope will
by which time the accounts will

be larger and more profitable to manage.

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

either centralized administration
of personal retirement accounts or
inveshtment of contributions by the
Social Security Administration...

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 e Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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