Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA)
Overview
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA) was a major U.S. tax‑cut package signed into law in 2001. It lowered individual income tax rates, reduced estate tax burdens, and made broad changes to retirement‑savings rules. The law included a sunset provision that would have ended many of its provisions in 2010, but several elements were later extended.
Key tax and retirement changes
- Lowered individual income tax brackets and modified tax schedules.
- Reduced the estate tax and changed its limits.
- Increased contribution limits and expanded options for retirement accounts.
- Allowed larger catch‑up contributions for individuals age 50 and over.
- Required plan administrators to roll small, inactive 401(k) balances into default IRAs to simplify account management.
- Permitted certain S corporation stakeholders to borrow against company pension plans.
Retirement plan specifics
EGTRRA introduced and clarified several employer‑sponsored and individual retirement options:
* Roth 401(k) and Roth 403(b): Employer plans that permit after‑tax contributions with tax‑free qualified distributions, similar in effect to Roth IRAs but within employer plans.
* Sidecar IRA (Roth IRA attached to an employer plan): Allowed employees to combine Roth‑style accounts with employer‑sponsored plans to benefit from different tax treatments while consolidating retirement investments.
* Revised life‑expectancy tables and plan rules that affected distributions and required minimum distributions calculations.
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Controversy and fiscal impact
EGTRRA was politically and fiscally contentious:
* The law was enacted when the federal budget showed a surplus. Subsequent events—economic downturns, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Homeland Security spending, and the Great Recession—substantially altered the fiscal outlook.
* Because EGTRRA included a sunset clause, its tax reductions were scheduled to expire in 2010; many provisions were ultimately extended.
* Critics raised concerns that the tax cuts contributed to long‑term deficits. Later tax legislation in 2010 and 2018 further changed the tax landscape, and debates over the impact of EGTRRA on federal debt and economic policy continued.
Legacy
EGTRRA reshaped U.S. tax policy and retirement‑savings options by lowering marginal tax rates and expanding retirement account flexibility. Its retirement provisions—especially Roth options in employer plans and higher catch‑up limits—have had lasting effects on how Americans save for retirement. The law also highlighted tensions between short‑term tax relief and long‑term fiscal sustainability.
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Key takeaways
- EGTRRA was a sweeping 2001 tax‑reform law that cut individual taxes and altered retirement rules.
- It expanded Roth options within employer plans, increased contribution limits, and enabled automatic rollovers of small 401(k) accounts to IRAs.
- The law’s sunset provision and subsequent extensions fueled ongoing debates about its fiscal consequences and legacy.