Book contents
- ERISA Principles
- ERISA Principles
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Table of Rules and Regulations
- Part I General Considerations
- 1 Overview of ERISA
- 2 ERISA’s Coverage
- Part II Conduct Controls: Welfare and Pension Plans
- Part III Content Controls: Pension Plans
- Part IV Tax Controls: Qualified Retirement Savings
- Part V Health Plan Content Controls
- Appendix ERISA’s Legislative History
- Index
2 - ERISA’s Coverage
from Part I - General Considerations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 February 2024
- ERISA Principles
- ERISA Principles
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Table of Rules and Regulations
- Part I General Considerations
- 1 Overview of ERISA
- 2 ERISA’s Coverage
- Part II Conduct Controls: Welfare and Pension Plans
- Part III Content Controls: Pension Plans
- Part IV Tax Controls: Qualified Retirement Savings
- Part V Health Plan Content Controls
- Appendix ERISA’s Legislative History
- Index
Summary
ERISA generally applies to any “employee benefit plan” established or maintained by an employer or a labor union. Whether a given benefit arrangement qualifies as a plan has been challenged on three grounds: transience, indefiniteness, or restricted coverage. ERISA applies only to plans that provide benefits to employees or their families, with the meaning of employee under ERISA tracking the common-law definition. The nature and intensity of ERISA’s regulation largely depends upon whether the plan provides retirement income or systematically defers compensation until termination of employment or beyond (a pension plan), or whether it provides any of certain other benefits specifically listed by the statute (a welfare plan). Finally, ERISA exempts from its coverage a few benefit arrangements that otherwise meet the statutory definition of an employee benefit plan. The most important exceptions are for unfunded executive deferred compensation programs (so-called top hat plans), and for plans sponsored by government or religious organizations.
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- ERISA Principles , pp. 28 - 58Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024