A recent
opinion piece by Robert C. Pozen, a non-resident fellow in
Economic Studies at the Brookings Institute, entitled "The Underfunding of Corporate Pension Plans"
examines how the current low interest rate environment is impacting the ability
of corporations to guarantee their payouts to future pensioners. I
realize that I've posted on this several times recently, however, with the
current seemingly endless period of very low interest rates and the growing
number of pension-eligible Americans, this issue is going to get worse before
it gets better and may well have a big negative impact on both future
pensioners and the bottom line of many American corporations.
Pension plan
future obligations are calculated using a "discount rate", the return
that the plan can reliably expect to earn on its portfolio of investments
between now and when the plan begins to pay out benefits. Long-term
benefit obligations are calculated using the benefit schedule and a projection
of the life span of the workers who will collect these benefits. The
lower the discount rate (or rate of return) the higher the plan's estimated
obligations and vice versa. With the current low discount rate (or, in
other words, low return on the low-risk investments (i.e. bonds) that are held
by pension plans), there is a growing gap between what companies have set aside
for our pensions and what they will have to pay out in the future. This
is what is termed the underfunding pension problem. Corporations will
have choices to make; make up the shortfall which cuts into corporate profits,
raise pension contributions, invest in higher risk and hopefully higher return
investments or cut benefits to existing and future beneficiaries. Each
option has both an upside and an accompanying downside.
Recently,
the Senate passed Surface Transportation Bill S.1813 which
changed the rules for calculating the future obligations of private sector,
single-employer sector pension plans. These changes can be found in Section 40315 , "Pension Funding
Stabilization", hidden among legislation for child seats, odometer
tampering and impaired driving countermeasures. Sneaky, huh?
In the past, corporations used a discount rate based on the average
interest rate on two year highly rated, low risk bonds. This new
legislation allows corporate pension plans to now use a discount rate that is
an average of interest rates over the past twenty-five years. Keeping in
mind that higher interest rates were the norm during most of the past two and a
half decades, the discount rate for most pension plans will increase by one to
two percentage points from four to six percent. Remember, the
higher the discount rate, the lower the plan's estimated future obligations
which lessens the corporation's contributions. Pension plan liabilities
are estimated to change roughly 15 percent for every one percentage point
change in the discount rate; the higher the discount rate, the lower the
apparent, actuarial obligations. As if by magic, pension underfunding has
been cured!
Here are
examples of how this change has impacted three large corporations:
1.) UPS
- the required 2013 pension plan contribution drops from $1.62 billion to $47
million.
2.) Lockheed
Martin - the required 2013 pension plan contribution drops from $2.35
billion to $1.4 billion.
3.) Boeing
- the required 2013 pension plan contribution drops from $2.655 billion to
$zero.
Just how big
is this underfunding problem in Corporate America? A study of 1,354 pension plans by David
Zion, Amit Varshney and Nichole Burnap of Credit Suisse suggests that the
private sector multi-employer pension plans (i.e union-related) alone are $369
billion underfunded with a funding rate of only 52 percent! Many of the
underfunded companies are found in the construction, transport, mining and
supermarket sectors. Funding rates below 65 percent are considered to be
critical.
On the
upside of the recent legislative changes, insurance premiums paid by
corporations to the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation, a government entity that
guarantees up to $56,000 in annual benefits for bankrupt companies with
underfunded pension plans, will rise. PBGC is currently protecting
pensions for 44 million participants in more than 27,000 pension plans and in
thirty-seven years, has covered pensioners in 4,300 failed pension plans.
In 2011 alone, 152 underfunded single-employer pension plans terminated,
pushing PBGC's total obligations up to nearly $107 billion. In 2011, the
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation recorded a deficit of $26 billion and paid
out nearly $5.5 billion to pensioners; under the new legislation, premium
increases of $9.6 billion over the next decade would take place. While
it's a start, one would hardly expect that PBGC would have the means to bailout
a massive pension failure. Here's a quote from their 2011 Annual
Report:
"Nonetheless,
PBGC’s obligations are clearly greater than its resources. We cannot
ignore PBGC’s future financial condition any more than we would that of the
pension plans we insure."
Reassuring,
isn't it? It's especially reassuring when one realizes that American
taxpayers are on the hook for any PBGC funding shortfalls.
The new
pension legislation is phased out by 2016, however, if interest rates are still
very low at that time, we can expect lobbyists representing the pension plans
of Corporate America to come begging hat in hand for another kick at the higher
discount rate legislation can. Right now, Congress is just kicking the pension can further down the road since the pension obligations will exist no matter
what legislative changes are made. Remember, the pensions must be fed!
Yes, well said. One needs a proactive approach through out the pension plan. I mean from initiation till maturity one has to be full of required funds. "Underfunding" can altogether ruin the plan. Watch out!
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