Public Pensions and Active Participant for IRA

In Massachusetts we have a public pension system (Defined Benefit) that takes the place of Social Security for many public employees (this happens for other states as well). Both the ER and EE contribute, but I have never considered this to be a “covered plan” for which the EE was an “active participant”, for the purposes of IRA deductibility. My reasoning was that this public pension system is a replacement for Social Security– participants don’t contribute to SS but instead to the public pension system. And, since you can be covered by SS and still deduct your IRA contribution, this seemed to be analogous and therefore not a covered plan. First question: is this a mistake?

Secondly, some employees for the public are temporary and do not participate in the pension, but also do not participate in SS. They are shunted into a third vehicle, made possible by OBRA ’90, that takes a mandatory 7.5% of their income and places it into a 457 OBRA plan. Does this count as a covered plan for the purposes of IRA deductibility?
Thanks



  • An “active participant” is explained in the link below. The employer must check the “Retirement Plan” box on the W-2 form if an employee meets the definition for any day in the calendar year. Comparisons to SS are not relevant. Your DB plan likely makes you an active participant regardless of who is making the contributions, however 457b participation does not fall under the definition. Therefore, those that participate only in the 457b are not treated as active participants, and if not covered under the pension (ie no contributions are made on their behalf to the DB plan, then the “retirement plan” box on the W2 should be left blank.
  • Income Tax Deductions on Traditional IRA Contributions — Ascensus

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