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Supplemental Benefit Planning for Tax-Exempt Employers

By John Hendrickson
October 31, 2017
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Tax-exempt employers face a matrix of tax and disclosure issues in designing an appropriate supplement retirement program. This resource intends to examine the income tax, payroll tax and Form 990 reporting aspects of the major plans currently available to tax-exempt employers, and review those major plans from the reference point of several major design considerations.

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Photo of John Hendrickson John Hendrickson

 

John Hendrickson focuses his practice on employee benefits and executive compensation. He has served as counsel to clients large and small, taxable and tax-exempt, including several large multinational corporations, with regard to all aspects of their employee benefit and executive compensation programs.

 

John Hendrickson focuses his practice on employee benefits and executive compensation. He has served as counsel to clients large and small, taxable and tax-exempt, including several large multinational corporations, with regard to all aspects of their employee benefit and executive compensation programs. He is known for his creative solutions and a common sense approach to solving client problems. Read John Hendrickson’s full bio.

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  • Posted in:
    Employment & Labor
  • Blog:
    Employee Benefits Blog
  • Organization:
    McDermott Will & Emery
  • Article: View Original Source

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