Press Release
regarding Revenue Ruling 2002-62
From The Office of
Public Affairs
October 3, 2002
PO-3498
TREASURY
HELPS TAXPAYERS PRESERVE RETIREMENT SAVINGS BY
ALLOWING A CHANGE TO PENSION DISTRIBUTION AMOUNTS
Today the Treasury Department and
the Internal Revenue Service released Revenue Ruling 2002-62 that will help
taxpayers preserve their retirement savings when there is an unexpected drop in
the value of their retirement savings. Some taxpayers began receiving fixed
payments from their IRA or retirement plan based on the value of their account
at the time they started receiving payments. Those taxpayers may now switch -
without penalty -- to a method of determining the amount of their payments
based on the value of their account as it changes from year to year.
“Taxpayers have worked hard to build their retirement savings. They shouldn’t
be penalized when the market is down,” stated Pam Olson, Assistant Secretary
for Tax Policy. “This change will help many taxpayers to preserve their
retirement savings by allowing those individuals to slow their distributions
down in the event of unexpected market downturns.”
Generally, taxpayers are subject to an extra 10% tax (in addition to regular
income tax) on amounts withdrawn from their IRAs or employer-sponsored
individual account plans prior to reaching 59½. An exception to that tax is
when a taxpayer takes distributions as part of a series of substantially equal
periodic payments over the taxpayer’s life expectancy or the joint life
expectancies of taxpayer and beneficiary. The IRS issued guidance in 1989
(Q&A 12 of Notice 89-25) that provided three methods for satisfying the
“substantially equal periodic payment” exception.
Two of the safe-harbor methods
described in Notice 89-25 result in a fixed amount that is required to be
distributed and could result in the premature depletion of the taxpayer’s
account in the event that the value of the assets in the account suffers a
decline in market value. Revenue Ruling 2002-62 provides relief to taxpayers
who selected one of these two methods by permitting them to change from a
method for determining the payments under which the amount is fixed to the
third method under the safe-harbor where the amount changes from year to year
based on the value in the account from which the distributions are being made.
In addition to permitting a one-time switch in method, the revenue ruling:
* Clarifies how an individual can satisfy the permitted method that tracks the
required minimum distribution rules of section 401(a)(9) in light of the recent
finalization of regulations regarding those requirements;
* Provides guidance on what constitutes a reasonable rate of interest for
determining payments to satisfy the substantially equal periodic payment rule;
and
*Provides a choice of mortality tables that can be used in satisfying the
permitted methods.
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