Even with that in mind I have a laundry list of unanswered questions, problems, and issues that would have to be answered, solved, and addressed before any private accounts were established.
- Who is eligible for a private account? What will be the cut off age?
- What percent of individual's contributions will be eligible for contribution?
- Will the tax status of the private account be on a Pre-Tax or After-Tax basis?
- If it will be Pre-Tax, that creates a tax cut, how will the massive loss in revenues be made up?
- If it will be After-Tax, will that point be made known when this is made to look like a 401K Plan?
- Who will administer these accounts? Employers? The government? Are Individuals forced to go to a Financial Institution on their own?
- Who pays the administration fees?
- Are administration fees included in Bush's Plan?
- What investments can be included? Private Funds? Stocks, bonds, options, futures, commodities? Anything? Who Decides what a person can invest in?
- Who manages those investments? Are they owned directly or in a mutual type fund?
- Who pays the brokerage fees? Are they straight fees or discounted?
- If these are collectively owned in mutual type fund, who does the accounting?
- If the private accounts are use, who then who votes the proxies?
- Will lump sum distributions now be allowed?
- Will beneficiary benefits continued to be offered.
- How will beneficiary, minor dependent, disability, and death benefits be funded?
- Does Bush's plan cap the level of earnings on private accounts to pay for existing and future "traditional" benefits?
- Is Bush using the "Cash Balance" type of retirement plan as his basis for this? Those type of Plans have not yet received favorable determination letters from the IRS.