Yes, a rural cooperative's 401(k) plan not only can but must be a money purchase pension plan if the rural cooperative does not have a grandfathered 401(k) plan. Code section 401(k)(1) reads as follows:
QUOTE
A profit-sharing or stock bonus plan, a pre-ERISA money purchase plan, or a rural cooperative plan shall not be considered as not satisfying the requirements of subsection (a) merely because the plan includes a qualified cash or deferred arrangement.
Thus, although most employers can have a 401(k) arrangement only in a profit-sharing or stock bonus plan, a rural cooperative can have one in the context of a pension plan. Moreover, the definition of a "rural cooperative plan" is
QUOTE
any pension plan--[list=1]
[*]which is a defined contribution plan (as defined in section 414(i)), and
[*]which is established and maintained by a rural cooperative.[/list=1]
Thus, only a
pension plan, not a profit-sharing or stock bonus plan, can be a rural cooperative plan. Since a state or local governmental entity that does not already have a 401(k) plan cannot start one, a new rural cooperative plan would have to be a money purchase pension plan.