Content area

Abstract

A supplemental executive retirement plan (SERP) is a type of non-qualified deferred compensation arrangement that is offered by many companies to their executives and select highly compensated employees. SERPs provide benefits that would be difficult to provide under a tax-qualified defined benefit or defined contribution plan. While there are several Department of Labor issues that may relate to a SERP (such as how broad a group the SERP can cover), this column focuses instead on certain Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) disclosure rules employers should consider in structuring, implementing, and administering a SERP. This column also looks at how SEC disclosure requirements in the firm's proxy statement shape the way shareholders and proxy advisory firms view SERPs -- and what to do to avoid negative perceptions. A SERP may take the form of a defined benefit plan, a defined contribution plan, or as a hybrid plan incorporating elements of both defined benefit and defined contribution plans.

Details

Title
How the SEC Influences SERPs: An Overview of Emerging Issues for Supplemental Executive Retirement Plans
Author
Scharf, David; Weisberg, Mark S
Pages
23-25
Section
Executive Benefits
Publication year
2013
Publication date
May 2013
Publisher
Aspen Publishers, Inc.
ISSN
00136808
Source type
Trade Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1365165909
Copyright
Copyright Aspen Publishers, Inc. May 2013