In addition to providing qualified plans to employees, many business
owners implement nonqualified alternatives in order to supplement retirement
benefits. These selective benefit plans are generally offered to key
employees and owners. One popular nonqualified benefit is deferred
compensation.

Basically, nonqualified deferred compensation refers to an arrangement
between an employer and an employee in which compensation for current
services is postponed until some future date or the occurrence of a future
event. The effect is to postpone taxation for the employee until
compensation is received - usually at retirement or disability.
Types of Deferred Compensation
Deferred compensation plans can be categorized several different ways.
Plans can be:
Funded or unfunded.
Forfeitable or nonforfeitable.
Defined benefit or money purchase.
They can also provide one or a combination of death benefits, disability
benefits and retirement benefits.
Funded plans generally involve a trust fund or escrow account where the
employer transfers money at a later date for its "promise to pay" deferred
compensation. These are not very popular as the participant may be deemed to
have "constructive receipt" of such funds and therefore inherits a current
tax liability when funded.
IRS Revenue Ruling 60-31, 1960-2 CB 174, states that an employee's right
to receive deferred compensation, backed during the deferral period solely
by an employer's "naked promise" to pay, produces no currently taxable
income for the employee. A deferred compensation plan is not regarded as
funded merely because the corporation purchased and owns a life insurance
policy or annuity contract to make certain that funds will be available when
needed.
Rabbi Trusts
One of the problems with a typical unfunded deferred compensation plan is
that the employee has no guarantee that future payments will be made. If the
employer defaults in making promised payments, becomes insolvent, or files
bankruptcy, the employee simply becomes a general creditor waiting in line
with all the other creditors hoping to recoup some of their receivables.
The rabbi trust protects an executive from an employer's future
unwillingness or inability to pay promised benefits while retaining the
benefits of deferred income taxation. The IRS has stated in a series of
private letter rulings that an irrevocable trust or an escrow account can be
established to fund a deferred compensation agreement as long as the assets
placed into the rabbi trust remain subject to the claims of general
creditors. If this condition is met, the employee will not be deemed to have
"constructive receipt" of the assets, and, therefore, will not have received
a current economic benefit. Hence, the employee will not be required to pay
taxes until the payments are made at a future date.
The rabbi trust gives the employee security in knowing that the employer
is, in fact, setting aside money to fulfill its obligation under a deferred
compensation agreement.