home learn more WiserAdvisor University contact us help
Learn. Explore. Connect.
 
   
WiserAdvisor University  >  Subject: Retirement Planning  >  Topic: Pensions  >  Article
About WiserAdvisor University

WiserAdvisor University is designed to provide you with high-quality information about investing and finance straight from those who know best: financial professionals. The University includes hundreds of informative articles on dozens of topics of interest to individual investors like you.
If you find an article informative and would like to be contacted by a financial advisor, we encourage you to fill out our simple form. The WiserAdvisor service is free, objective, accurate, and confidential, and will match you to qualified financial advisors who can help you reach your investment goals.


About WiserAdvisor.com

WiserAdvisor.com is an independent and unbiased matching service designed to help individuals find the best financial advisors for their unique needs. This easy-to-use system prides itself on its simplicity and accuracy. After you fill out a simple form, our algorithms search through the thousands of advisors in our system and provide you with up to three advisors who are best able to help you accomplish your goals.

Other Articles
Can You Count on Your Defined-Benefit Plan?
Are Defined-Benefit Plans Extinct?
Retirement Dilemma: Pension or Payout
Take Advantage of that Employee Retirement Plan
Your Retirement Plan: the Buck Stops Here
Investment Philosophy for Pension Trustees
Is Your Pension Safe?
Municipal Pension Minutia
The Pension Issue
Defined Benefit Pension Plan Disaster
Pension Plans: Fancy projections, Dangerous Outcomes
Pensions: Who's the Patsy?
Are Company Retirement Plans About to Get Better?
Pension Reform: Defined Benefit Plans - What’s Wrong? What Needs Fixing?
Pension Reform: So, What’s Washington, D.C. Doing About All This?
What To Do With That Lump-Sum Distribution?
Are Pension Plans in America the next Enron?
Pension Income Planning: Lump Sum or Monthly Fixed Pension
Social Security: Are the Forecasts of Doom and Gloom Fact or Fiction?
 

Pensions

Are Defined-Benefit Plans Extinct?

By Roger Wohlner
CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ Practioner, Asset Strategy Consultants

Defined-benefit pension plans have been on a steady decline for the last couple of decades, while defined-contribution plans, such as 401(k) plans, have increased dramatically. In fact, defined-benefit plans have declined from 148,096 plans in 1980 to 56,045 in 1998 (the last year data is available), while participation in defined-contribution plans has tripled during the same period (Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, October 2004). In 2003, 44 million individuals were covered by defined-benefit plans, but 27 million were retirees - only 17 million were active workers (Source: Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Services, January 31, 2005).

A number of factors have led to this steady decline in defined-benefit plans, including:

  • Increased costs to companies
    The recent market declines seriously eroded the value of pension assets, while declining interest rates dramatically increased liabilities for future benefits to retirees. The shortfall is so significant that many companies are now required to start putting significant amounts of cash into these plans or look at other alternatives.

  • A more mobile work force
    Defined-benefit pension plans provide more significant benefits for workers who stay with the company for a long time, with a substantial portion of the benefits earned during the last few years of employment. With employees changing jobs more frequently, the portability of 401(k) plans make them desirable to younger workers.

  • A changing economy
    Traditionally, defined-benefit plans were offered by large manufacturing companies, often as a result of union negotiations and contracts. As the economy became more service based, new companies have opted for 401(k) plans rather than defined-benefit plans.

    Even companies with defined-benefit plans are looking for ways to reduce the tremendous cost of these plans. While companies can't eliminate benefits already earned, they can change future benefits. Some of the more common options include:

  • Offer a cash-balance plan to new and/or current employees.
    Although a cash-balance plan is technically a defined-benefit plan, it operates much differently than a traditional pension plan. The employer still completely funds the payments, but rather than a guaranteed pension for life, a cash-balance plan provides employees with a lump-sum amount that can be used for retirement or to purchase an annuity. By the late 1990s, 11% of all traditional defined-benefit plans had been converted to cash-balance plans, representing 40% of all defined-benefit assets (Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, October 2004).

  • Freeze the defined-benefit plan.
    Benefits are frozen at a point in time so employees do not earn any additional benefits. In exchange, the company might increase contributions to the 401(k) plan.

  • Terminate the plan.
    The most drastic solution is to terminate the plan. When terminated, the plan assets are used to either buy an annuity from an insurance company or issue lump-sum payments to workers.

    If you have a defined-benefit plan at work, keep in mind that the pension benefits you're counting on may change. You can only count on benefits you have currently earned, but not benefits that might be earned in the future. Thus, you might want to review your retirement plans to make sure you haven't placed too much emphasis on retirement plan benefits. Refigure your plans assuming your pension benefits are only half or less of what you currently expect. What would you have to do to make up this shortfall?
    Select the services that you need from a financial advisor and hit 'Go'. Fill out a short form and your info will be sent to Roger who will contact you soon.
    Portfolio Management Retirement Planning Estate Planning Taxes
    Educational Planning Business Finances Insurance      



    Click here to submit request>
    Go Back to Topic Page>

    If you are an advisor and would like to see your articles published, click here



    Article reprinted by permission. Unauthorized reproduction of content prohibited.
  •