Jan 07
Internal Controls in an Employee Benefit Plan – Take 1
By Christina Brinker | Trackback URL Add commentsTo ensure a Plan Sponsor is fulfilling their fiduciary obligations related to the oversight of an employee benefit plan I have listed some of the internal control matters that should be addressed (please note this is not an all inclusive list as facts and circumstances of each Plan vary):
- Ensure all user control considerations included in the third party administrator’s (record-keeper, trustee, custodian, etc) Type II SAS 70 are in place at the Plan Sponsor
- Analyze compliance testing results provided by the third party administrator and if the Plan failed any tests ensure that corrective action is taken in a timely manner (distributions or additional contributions to the Plan as necessary)
- Determine if established internal controls are designed appropriately to catch errors or fraud that may occur during the processing of transactions related to the Plan. Consider conducting a brainstorming session with individuals involved in the Plan in determining what could go wrong and then determine if controls currently in place are adequate to address such risks.
- If the census is prepared by the Plan Sponsor ensure that the total wages included in the census reconciles with the organizations payroll records (remember census must include all employees that received a paycheck during the year whether employed by the organization or not during the year); the census should also be reconciled with the record-keeper statements (employee contributions, employer contributions and loan repayments). Key point – A reconciled census that agrees with the Plan Sponsors audited financial statements and the record-keeper statements will save time and money during a benefit plan audit
- Controls should be in place to ensure all information included on the participant statements (social security #, name, compensation, date of birth, date of hire and date of termination) is complete and accurate. Inaccurate information could lead to:
- Allowing individuals to enter the plan when they were not eligible to do so or not allowing an employee into the plan that is in fact eligible.
- Inaccurate amounts being withheld for employee contributions and/or employer matching contributions.
- Inaccurate amounts being withheld or forfeited when an employee receives a distribution (early distribution tax penalties or issues related to utilizing the appropriate vesting percentage for employer contributions)
6. Determine if the annual Form 5500 reconciles to the Plan’s financial statement’s
Interested in refining your internal controls for benefit plan recordkeeping. More will come in a later blog post…
Categories: Employee Benefits, General Information, Governance, Internal ControlsTags: 401k, 403(b), 5500, Benefit Plan, compliance, Internal Controls, retirement

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