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A Surprising Thing About Pensions

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It can be easy for high-level thinkers to assume that it's a good thing when companies phase out their pension plans and replace them with 401(k)s. After all, the company is relieved of a lot of responsibility, and most of the investment performance risk is shifted to the worker. That seems like a good move for corporations, though it's understandably not pleasing to workers. It turns out, though, that pensions can be good not only for employees, but also for the corporate world.

Diane Oakley, director of the National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS), recently testified before a Senate committee, saying, "Pensions are a 'high five' for the U.S economy: investing $5.35 trillion in assets for the future, keeping some 5 million retired Americans out of poverty, supporting 5.3 million American jobs, and delivering retirement income at nearly 50% lower cost than individual defined contribution retirement accounts."

This additional detail might surprise you: "When retirees have a stable and secure pension check, they don't stick it under the mattress. They spend that income [on] goods and services in their local communities, leaving a substantial economic footprint from coast to coast." It makes sense, since pensions offer incomes that retirees can count on. Those of us relying on 401(k) plans, IRAs, and similar beasts are busy socking away what we can, but we have no idea how big our nest eggs will ultimately grow, and how much income they'll generate. Thus, many of us engage in some hoarding; we put off or reject various purchases.

That's unfortunate
While this is great news about pensions, the sad truth is that they're on a path to extinction. Last year, Towers Watson reported that only 17% of Fortune 100 companies still offered pensions to some of their workers. Many of those are Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDEX: ^DJI) components, such as General Electric (NYSE: GE  ) , which reported being fully funded, a rarity among pension providers. It's logical for big blue chips to be the holdouts. For old stalwarts such as GE, pensions are longtime fixtures and the companies tend to be big enough, with predictable enough income, to be able to plan for pension funds (and dividends, for that matter).

Still, pension freezes and eliminations continue, with companies such as Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT  ) and Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS  ) switching to 401(k)s for many or all workers in 2011. Verizon (NYSE: VZ  ) workers recently went on strike, protesting a proposed pension freeze, among other things. Even General Electric, which has a pension fund so healthy that the company has hardly contributed to it since 1987, is freezing its pension, making it unavailable to new hires.

Ramifications and bad impressions
Pensions can weigh on financial statements. Milliman Inc., which tracks the 100 largest corporate pension providers, noted recently that at least three companies -- Honeywell (NYSE: HON  ) , Verizon, and AT&T (NYSE: T  ) -- changed their GAAP accounting in 2010 to recognize accumulated losses in their plans, taking sizable charges. Many companies would likely prefer to not have to deal with pensions at all.

But while companies are phasing out pensions, our economy is sputtering. As more and more people rely on 401(k)s rather than pensions, many people are not spending as freely as they otherwise might, thus creating a drag on our recovery. Despite that, many are not hoarding enough, and are on track to have gruesome retirements.

More surprises
According to NIRS, people without pensions are six times more likely to be living in poverty than those with pensions. Those folks cost society, via public assistance, and they're much less able to spend money and support the economy. Government pensions are valuable, too. The NIRS estimates that "each taxpayer dollar invested in state and local pensions supported $11.45 in total economic activity, while each dollar paid out in benefits supported $2.36 in economic activity." And best of all, there's a strong case to be made that pensions are more cost-effective than alternatives in providing retirement income.

America should rethink pensions and how we might bring them back.

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Longtime Fool contributor Selena Maranjian owns shares of Verizon Communications, but she holds no other position in any company mentioned. Click here to see her holdings and a short bio. Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of Walt Disney and AT&T. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Read/Post Comments (7) | Recommend This Article (8)

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On September 13, 2011, at 2:19 PM, exeter17 wrote:

    6 times more likely to be in poverty - isn't purely a pension function. Companies offering pensions tend to be profitable and well run.

  • Report this Comment On September 13, 2011, at 2:24 PM, mdk0611 wrote:

    Limiting my comments to public pensions, I don't think you've accounted for the fact that the taxpayer, whether he/she is covered by a pension or not, is the ultimate guarantor of public pensions. And the fact is, few if any of these pensions are overfunded.

    In addition, pension benefits can be used to curry political favor. Witness the gratuitious 7% bump in New Jersey benefits 7-8 years ago, conveniently coincifding with an election. The political benefit is immediate, but the costs are deferred until a new generation of taxpayers is in place.

  • Report this Comment On September 13, 2011, at 2:46 PM, jdmeck wrote:

    Pensions only work if you stay at one company for most of your working life. That does not happen very often in today's world. That's another reason why pensions are going away.

    The reason people who don't have pensions are more likely to live in poverty has nothing to do with the pension. Most people in poverty never worked for a large company that ever paid a pension to begin with.

  • Report this Comment On September 13, 2011, at 3:00 PM, Brent2223 wrote:

    It's simple economies of scale, one plan investing for 1,000 people is always going to be more cost effective than 1,000 individual investors, plus the pooled capital gives more investing opportunities. DB plans do a better job than any retirement vehicle in not deferring costs, that's what the whole funded status is all about. Cutting pension plans is really deferring the cost, companies save money today at the expense of employees who will not have enough income in retirement.

  • Report this Comment On September 13, 2011, at 3:13 PM, mdk0611 wrote:

    Brent - If DB plans do a better job in not deferring costs, how do you explain the condition of the vast majority of state and local government DB plans?

  • Report this Comment On September 14, 2011, at 1:42 AM, JoeMc7 wrote:

    Pension plans can be well-managed but if the company goes bankrupt, the pension may be discontinued. With a 401(k), you can choose your own investments (usually mutual funds), diversify, and reduce the risk.

  • Report this Comment On September 14, 2011, at 11:24 AM, Tygered wrote:

    I would not be retired right now if I didn't have a pension. I did have a 403b, but after 2007-08 that went way down (some 29%). Most of my co-workers at the time lost 50% or more. Many pulled money out and/or stopped paying in. What I'm saying is the average working Joe is not savvy enough to save up enough money in a 401k or 403b to live on during retirement (which can be 30 years or more.) A pension gives the working class a pretty darn good chance to live out the remaining years in some dignity and actually be a net contributor to the economy.

    But as usual, short-sighted politicians continue to shred the safety net in this country. I'm just happy I dodged that bullet. Now I have to do what I can to make sure they don't steal my social security and medicare from me.

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