
back
Want
to support Global Action on Aging?
Click
below:

Thanks!
|

|
Uniting to repair
pensions

By James A. Klein,
The Washington Post
September 1, 2003
Adversity often brings together unlikely allies. So,
as we celebrate Labor Day, it is not surprising that business and organized
labor have come together to express their common concern for the future of
the pension system — specifically, defined benefit pensions funded by
employers that pay a prescribed and guaranteed lifetime benefit.
This alliance cannot come too soon, because defined
benefit pensions face extinction like no other time in their history.
According to the AFL-CIO, these pensions "are
workers' best bet for retirement security on top of Social Security
payments." Many businesses, especially large companies, agree and they
voluntarily sponsor these plans for their workers. But this system is in
steep decline and the looming threats make the outlook bleak.
According to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. (PBGC),
the federal agency that guarantees these benefits, the number of insured
plans in the U.S. dropped from about 114,000 plans in 1985 to just more than
32,000 in 2002.
The challenges to the system are varied and complex.
Changes in work patterns, such as the decline in job tenure for U.S. workers
from a long career with a single employer — often typical when these plans
were first established — to just 4.7 years today, can make it difficult to
accrue a meaningful retirement benefit under a traditional plan. Moreover,
the portability and opportunity to accumulate substantial wealth under a
401(k)-type plan makes such arrangements extremely attractive (the negative
stock market notwithstanding). But ill-advised public policy is preventing
defined benefit plans from fulfilling their role in ensuring retirement
income security.
The one bright light in this dismal declining
pension system picture is the growth of so-called "cash balance"
and other "hybrid" plans. These employer-funded and federally
insured defined benefit plans accrue benefits more evenly and have features
akin to 401(k) plans. For many workers cash balance/hybrid plans deliver a
more meaningful retirement benefit than traditional pensions. Yet recent
court decisions and a hostile atmosphere in Congress cast the future of
these plans — and therefore the defined benefit system itself — in
doubt.
Compounding these threats are limits on employer
contributions to well-funded pension plans and Congressionally mandated use
of the interest rate on 30-year U.S. Treasury bonds (no longer even issued
by the government) for purposes of calculating pension liabilities. The
anomalous result: During the 1990s prosperity boom, companies couldn't make
additional contributions to their plans.
But in today's down economy, businesses must use an
outdated interest rate that inflates the required funding at a time when
they can least afford it. Actuaries estimate if the interest rate problem is
not fixed, employers may be forced this year to expend 6 times the $14
billion they contributed in 2001. That money is needed to create jobs,
secure health benefits, and engage in myriad things workers and retirees
also value this Labor Day.
Couple these upside-down disincentives for
responsible funding with employer uncertainty over potential changes in the
accounting rules for pensions and it's a miracle any company today takes on
the long-term obligation of sponsoring a defined benefit plan.
The permanent solutions to these problems are not
easy — but the initial steps are breathtakingly straightforward. And we
have no choice but to start now if we think these plans deserve to be saved
— let alone encouraged to thrive.
Congress should immediately act to fix the interest
rate dilemma by passing the bipartisan Pension Preservation and Savings
Expansion Act introduced by Reps. Rob Portman, Ohio Republican, and Ben
Cardin, Maryland Democrat. That measure also promotes other reforms for both
defined benefit pension and defined contribution retirement savings plans.
The U.S. Treasury Department should quickly finalize rules establishing the
legitimacy of cash balance and other hybrid plans.
The U.S. Department of Labor notes that Labor Day
observances in bygone years were marked by emphasizing "the economic
and civic significance of the holiday." There cannot be a more
important economic and civic need than ensuring the future of the defined
benefit system to support workers in their retirement years. Labor Day 2003
is the right time to commit ourselves to that goal.
Copyright ©
2002 Global Action on Aging
Terms of Use | Privacy
Policy | Contact Us
|