Private Pensions


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Private Pensions


Book Description

In response to a congressional request, GAO assessed issues relating to the portability and preservation of private pension benefits, specifically: (1) whether job mobility adversely affected retirement income; (2) what kinds of portability and preservation arrangements existed and the extent to which they were used; and (3) the problems and tradeoffs involved in implementing proposals to enhance portability or preservation of pension benefits. GAO found that: (1) for workers with defined benefit plans, changing jobs would usually result in lower retirement incomes, since benefits and tenure usually do not transfer to another plan and plans base benefits on workers' earnings at the time they leave the plan, rather than their earnings at retirement; (2) workers who participate in a series of defined plans should not lose their retirement income if they keep their benefits in their previous plans, transfer them to subsequent plans, or convert them into individual retirement accounts (IRA); (3) pension preservation is a concern, since many workers spend, rather than reinvest, their cashed-out pension benefits; (4) some multi-employer plans and single-employer plans with reciprocity agreements allow plan portability, but cover less than 20 percent of the private-sector plan participants; (5) IRA are available as a pension preservation mechanism to all workers; (6) only 6 percent of all pension plans accept assets transferred from other plans; and (7) proposals to enhance portability and preservation would give workers better retirement benefits, but would increase employer costs and cause tax revenue losses.




The Pension Portability Act of 1987


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Pension Portability and Preservation


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GAO examined pension portability and preservation for workers who have vested pension benefits, focusing on: (1) how job mobility affected workers' pension incomes in retirement; (2) types of portability and preservation arrangements; and (3) legislative proposals designed to enhance pension portability and preservation. GAO found that: (1) workers vested in a series of defined benefit plans could suffer retirement income losses, while those vested in a series of defined contribution plans would not experience a job mobility loss if they kept their vested pension assets in the plans or rolled them over into another plan; (2) the private pension system had limited pension and service portability; (3) many employees spent rather than preserved their cashed-out pension assets when changing jobs; and (4) implementation of current proposals would entail difficult economic tradeoffs by employers, employees, and the government.




Pension Portability Among Public Health Officials


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The Southern Legislative Conference (SLC) conducted a survey of the administrative entities managing the pensions of public health employees in all 50 states to determine their rules and regulations regarding pension portability for this category of public employee. Based on the responses to the survey questionnaire and additional research, the SLC researchers were able to ascertain: whether the pension plan in a state permits an employee to purchase service credits for a prior period of qualified employment in another jurisdiction, both in another state and within the state; whether the pension plan is a defined benefit (DB) or defined compensation (DC) plan; the minimum amount of time required for an employee's pension benefits to be fully vested; the existence of any recent legislative activity related to the portability of retirement plans of public health officials in each state; whether any federal tax laws impact on the pension portability of these public health employees; and the existence of pension portability in other public employment sector categories.This paper discusses these results and notes that this information may be important for policy-makers at all levels of government as they initiate concrete steps to prepare for the “grayingâ€ŗ of America and the expected huge increase in retirees, plunging public pension funds, and shortages of health care workers. Enhancing pension portability may help states seeking to attract and retain an adequate supply of well-trained health care workers.