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Columns
Molly Ivins
Pensions
October 14, 2005
AUSTIN, Texas -- The entire political world is agog: Tom DeLay indicted, Scooter Libby in danger, Karl Rove rumors abound, Miers' nomination in doo-doo. So I'm writing about ... pensions. They're just so sexy, I couldn't resist.
Of course, the word pension is a terminal turnoff for anyone under 60 -- so redolent of the blue-rinse perm set. As one whose idea of financial planning consists of playing bingo at the Safeway, I'd prefer to be out listening to reggaeton, myself. Still, when you're getting screwed, you really should know about it.
This column is part of a continuing effort to see if we can keep our eyes on the shell with the pea under it, even while some other shells, mighty flashy and colorful, are whizzing around. Our particular shell bears the fatal rubric, "You are getting screwed again."
Even the most paranoid among us would not suggest that members of the Bush administration are getting themselves into legal trouble just to keep attention away from the effects of their policies. But it is the policies that can mess up our lives. Indictments may provide satisfaction to some, but they do not clean up the messes left by bad policy.
Envision this, oh mod, rad, chic young people: Until 20 years ago, about the time you were born, most geezers approaching retirement had a traditional defined-benefit pension plan. The longer you worked at a company and the more money you made, the more you got at your retirement. Employers kept increasing their contributions to these plans, and whatever risk that came with them was assumed by the employers.
Gone with the wind. For years, companies have been cutting their contributions and moving more and more of the market risk from themselves to their employees. They switched to "defined-contributions" plans, like the 401(k), where the employee chooses the investments and assumes the risk (think of the stock market in recent years).
In 1984, only 19 percent of employers with plans used defined-contribution plans. In 2004, it was up to 93 percent, according to a comprehensive series in the Minneapolis Star Tribune on what the pension changes are doing to people in that state. By contrast, in 1984, 57 percent of companies had defined-benefit plans. By 2004, that number was 15 percent.
The Bush administration has approved a change that makes it legal for companies to modify their pension plans in a way that usually discriminates against older workers who were covered under the earlier plans. But this is the just the beginning.
Making your pension disappear is a new corporate art form. There is, for example, the "wear away." The Star Tribune gives this example: Say you've been working for a company for 20 years, at the end of which you are entitled to a pension of $2,000 a month. BUT, your company decides to "revise" the plan and, lo, suddenly you have to have worked for 40 years to qualify for $2,000 a month.
Technically, the company has not reduced your pension benefit -- it is just holding the benefit in place until time "wears away" the difference between the new terms and the old terms.
Another trick is just underfunding the pension plan. During the last five years, underfunded company pension plans have increased by five times and are short in funds by $340 billion, up from $20 billion.
The latest corporate craze is for companies to declare bankruptcy, dumping pension responsibilities on the federal government and walking away, only to start doing business again without that nasty pension anchor around their necks. Your pension gets dumped to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., a government entity that ensures $2 trillion of pension benefits. The PBGC is funded by employers, who pay it $19 per employee annually.
This worked fine for years, until a bunch of steel companies and airlines declared bankruptcy. The Guaranty Corp. is now responsible for $62.3 billion in pension checks, but it has only $39 billion. Employer contributions have not kept up, so the PBGC now has a $23 billion deficit -- and chances are the taxpayers will wind up bailing it out, as we did the savings and loan industry.
In addition, the PBGC does not cover health benefits. If your company chooses the temporarily-bankrupt-until-we-can-dump-our-pension-plan route, you'll be out that much more. Among the Fortune 1000 companies, the number of pension plans frozen or terminated went from 45 in 2003 to 71 last year, according to Watson Wyatt Worldwide, an employee benefits consultant quoted by the Star Tribune. Another 25 companies closed their pension plans to new hires.
There are several proposals now about what to do rumbling around in Congress. One I particularly like would forbid companies from continuing to fund their special executive retirement plans if their rank-and-file pensions are seriously underfunded.
"The biggest byproduct of these changes is fear," said the Star Tribune in its series. Fear may be a more dangerous emotion than anger. It turns life into an "every man for himself scramble" without unity, community, caring or sharing.
In fact, every one of us comes into this world naked and helpless, and most leave it in the same condition -- and we are dependent on one another every single day in between. The "stand on your own feet and take care of yourself" attitude the right wing keeps pushing is not only cruel, but stupid, too.
To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2005 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Molly Ivins
"A moral issue" December 29, 2005
"This could scarcely be clearer" December 28, 2005
"Fantasy in Iraq" December 21, 2005
"Good old constitutional crisis" December 19, 2005
"Another mission accomplished" December 15, 2005
"Pre-procrastination Christmas booklist!" December 13, 2005
"Annual Christmas book list" December 6, 2005
"Talking for God, taking for personal gain" December 1, 2005
"Let's make lemonade this Thanksgiving" November 24, 2005
"Which Bush crony will be the next Brownie?" November 17, 2005
"Are they stupid, or are they lying?" November 14, 2005
"What have we become?" November 10, 2005
"The Brownie memos" November 8, 2005
"Worst legacy of the Bush years" November 3, 2005
"Leaping lightly" November 1, 2005
"Diane Wilson, magnificent unreasonableness" October 25, 2005
"How do we fix this mess?" October 20, 2005
"Good ideas on how to fix things" October 18, 2005
"Pensions" October 14, 2005
"Outrage of the Week" October 12, 2005
"The big picture" October 6, 2005
"Bunker Time: Harriet Miers" October 6, 2005
"Ronnie Earle, partisan fanatic?" September 30, 2005
"The KatrinaRita" September 27, 2005
"A giant snit" September 22, 2005
"Project Censored 2006" September 20, 2005
"The Bankruptcy Act and New Orleans" September 17, 2005
"Dear Dubya, Your Pal, Perry" September 15, 2005
"Where to look first" September 8, 2005
"Happy Labor Day, comrades" September 4, 2005
"Real consequences" September 1, 2005
"Solidarity Forev ... ooops, make that, Solidarity Later" September 1, 2005
"Blink" August 30, 2005
"The trouble with deregulation" August 27, 2005
"John Roberts and the Federalist Society*" July 27, 2005
"The AFL-CIO, CWC, SEIU, and tough SOBs" July 26, 2005
"We're missing the point" July 19, 2005
"Karl Rove, the CIA, and the media" July 14, 2005
"Eaten alive by corruption" July 7, 2005
""Progress" through economic interest" July 1, 2005
"The liberal straw man" June 28, 2005
"Follow the money" June 23, 2005
"PBS, CPB, and Republican bias" June 19, 2005
"Bush's high office appointments" June 15, 2005
"The Hyper Rich" June 8, 2005
"Indians pay conservative lobbyists to meet with Bush" June 7, 2005
"More fun from Texas" June 2, 2005
"Catapulting the propaganda" May 30, 2005
"The irony surplus" May 26, 2005
"National Laboratory for Bad Government" May 25, 2005
"The Koran and Guantanamo" May 18, 2005
"This is a revoltin" May 18, 2005
"Meanwhile, back in Iraq" May 10, 2005
"The current state of American energy policy" May 5, 2005
"Progressive indexing? Oh, you mean cutting Social Security benefits?" May 4, 2005
"Populist lagniappe" April 28, 2005
"The nuclear option and judicial activists" April 26, 2005
"John Bolton vote delay" April 21, 2005
"I like conservatives" April 19, 2005
"The real consequences of Tax Day" April 13, 2005
"Technical violations: oh, they're all related" April 12, 2005
"Non-parent in residence" April 5, 2005
"Hypocrisy, the U.S. and the U.N." April 1, 2005
"Truly crazy: the Cheney energy policy" March 29, 2005
"The Schiavo mistake" March 21, 2005
"This guy smells like a slop jar" March 16, 2005
"Government produced "news"" March 15, 2005
"Arrogant, humorless, self-righteous and confrontational" March 10, 2005
"Go, Byrd" March 7, 2005
"Bankruptcy Bill: A gift to big bankers and credit card companies" March 3, 2005
"They're at it again" March 1, 2005
"Yeah, it's really terrible what the president of Harvard said" February 24, 2005
"Fiscal nonsense" February 22, 2005
"Tort reform: not as simple as they'd like you to think" February 16, 2005
"The President's budget" February 16, 2005
"More bad news from Bush" February 10, 2005
"A no-brainer" February 8, 2005
"Divide between Bush's rhetoric and reality" February 3, 2005
"International election black clouds" February 1, 2005
"More complicated than George W. Bush thinks it is" January 28, 2005
""Private accounts" versus "personal accounts"" January 27, 2005
"What, do you want to insult Condoleezza Rice's integrity?" January 24, 2005
"Alternate reality" January 21, 2005
"Character" January 18, 2005
"A flat out whopper" January 13, 2005
"These people are slicker than bus station chili" January 11, 2005
"Prior-roarities" January 9, 2005
"Off to a bad start" January 3, 2005
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