Confero Spring 2014: Issue 6 | Page 24

Feature GOVERNMENT’S ROLE IN THE PENSION SYSTEM: WHO IS IT HELPING? By Erica Harper, AASA, EA, MAAA E veryone has their own perspective on government’s role in our daily lives. Is it there to provide aid and assistance or is meant to merely provide the framework for us to govern ourselves? In the context of the US pension plan system, what started out as a framework for the provision and funding of retirement benefits, has evolved most recently into a pattern of government assistance – but to what end? Is it intended to benefit the employees, the plan sponsors or the government itself? rules for determining the minimum and maximum tax deductibility of contributions, precluded discrimination in favor of highly compensated employees over rank-in-file, and prevented the misuse of plan assets for means other than the benefit of plan participants. At the same time, it established the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), a pension insurance system intended to protect participants’ benefits up to specified limits set by law. All-in-all, it provided some much-needed structure to an otherwise rudderless system. Dating back 40 years, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) was enacted to give participants a better understanding of their eligibility and entitlements from their pension plans. It also defined the In good times, when the market was strong, interest rates were high and plans were well-funded, these rules permitted plan sponsors to avoid contributions, despite the fact that participants continued to earn benefits each year. At the time, this 18 | SPRING 22 SUMMER 2014 2013 was a win-win for companies and the government. Companies found “better” uses for their cash, and the government benefited from greater tax revenue when fewer deductions were taken. However, it neglected to consider the future benefit security of participants should a downturn occur. In the early 2000s, with the failure of several high profile companies putting a strain ۈH