How defined benefit plans work
Why defined benefit plans are disappearing
A short history of defined benefit plans and the PBGC
How to check on your plan's health
Dangers to public employee pensions
Employer promises to pay worker a certain defined (known) amount
Typical example
Employer promises to give monthly pension benefit of 1 percent of monthly pay times the number of years worked
(20 years) * (1 percent / year) * (former salary of $3,000 / month) = $600 / month pension
Worker doesn't have to contribute or manage money
Employer is responsible for meeting promised obligation
Traditional pensions are large burden for employer -- especially small employers
Other savings vehicles (401(k), IRA) became available in the 1980s
ERISA (Employee Retirement Income Security Act) passed in 1974 after bankruptcy of automaker Studebaker and insolvency of its pension plan
ERISA establishes rules for management of pensions
ERISA sets up PBGC (Pension Benefit Guarantee Corp.)
PBGC currently insures 67,000 defined benefit plans covering 41 million workers
Company plans must pay insurance premiums to PBGC
PBGC doesn't cover small plans with fewer than 25 employees
PBGC doesn't cover medical benefits
PBGC only insures a maximum of $2,200 in monthly pension benfits
Labor Department and IRS generally only audit the largest pension plans
Most of the 670,000 small pensions are not audited by the government
Qualified plans are required to provide disclosure to employees
Must provide summary plan document which describes plan
Must provide summary of annual report for plan
Must provide annual individual benefit statement
Shows how much you might get from the plan if you continue working
Plan must provide IRS Form 5500-C/R if requested
Employers and plan managers must manage plan for benefit of employees, but check your plan to ensure self-dealing isn't going on
Federal employee pension funded has unfunded liability of $1.4 trillion
It's true that the federal government shouldn't go bankrupt because of its power to tax, but no private company would be able to keep its books like the government
Pensions for federal, state and local government employees are not covered by ERISA
Many local government pensions are seriously underfunded
If your plan is underfunded, start saving through a savings plan