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Protecting
Pensions Demographics
are squeezing defined-benefit plans
Christian
Science Monitor, August 8, 2003 For 44 million Americans, the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation is as important to their retirement as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is to their savings account. But there's disturbing news: The General Accounting Office,
Congress's investigating arm, recently put the PBGC - the agency that
insures defined-benefit pensions - on its "high risk" list of
government programs. Remember the savings-and-loan crisis of the 1980s?
Congress spent about $124 billion in taxpayer money reimbursing savers whose
S&Ls went under, "bankrupting" the federal insurer, the FSLIC. A gathering pension crisis could require a similar bailout. Defined-benefit pensions are traditional plans in which a retiree
receives a guaranteed payment based on salary and years of service. The
company's pension fund invests in stocks and bonds. The more the investment
earns, the less the company must contribute to the plan. If the investments
don't perform as predicted, the fund may become underfunded. In recent years, pension funds have been squeezed by the stock
market and demographics. Most people covered by defined-benefit plans work
for or have retired from older companies with an aging workforce. Many of
these companies - in the auto and steel industries, for example - have far
fewer workers than they used to. In 1986 there were three workers for every
pensioner. By one estimate, in 2006 retirees in defined-benefit plans will
outnumber workers by 12 percent. Experts peg current underfunding of defined-benefit plans
nationwide at $300 billion. The number of bankrupt companies for which the
PBGC must pay pensioners - firms like Eastern Air Lines or Bethlehem Steel -
is growing. The agency now serves some 1 million retirees, up from 350,000
in 1993. The GAO estimates the PBGC may soon have to cover another $35
billion. Yet the agency ran a $3.6 billion deficit in fiscal 2002. In the midst of all this, business wants accounting changes that
would decrease a plan's assumed liabilities, reducing the amount employers
must contribute. Current assumptions are based on a 30-year bond that the
Treasury Department no longer issues; these assumptions overestimate plan
liabilities. But many observers worry the changes employers want would
exaggerate the funds' health, thus endangering pensions - and requiring more
from the PBGC. The Bush administration has proposed a reasonable phased-in
compromise. But business complains that the Bush plan would still undervalue
pension funds and cost employers too much in contributions needed to comply. The federal treasury can't afford another S&L-type bailout.
Taxpayers and retirees would be better served by Congress adopting the
administration's sensible proposal. Pension funds must be as strong as they
look. Copyright ©
2002 Global Action on Aging
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