August 18,
2006; The New
York Times
(nytimes.com)
By THE ASSOCIATED
PRESS Filed
at 2:20 a.m.
ET
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- President
Bush signed
a broad overhaul
of pension
and savings
rules Thursday,
giving millions
of people a
better chance
of getting
the retirement
benefits they
have earned.
The
law, passed
with fanfare
by Congress
two weeks ago,
gives companies
seven years
to shore up
funding of
their traditional
pensions, also
known as defined
benefit plans.
Special rules
for seriously
underfunded
companies require
them to catch
up faster.
The
30,000 such
plans run by
employers are
estimated to
be underfunded
by $450 billion.
''Americans
who spent a
lifetime working
hard should
be confident
that their
pensions will
be there when
they retire,''
Bush said.
He
added a stern
instruction
to corporate
America.
''You
should keep
the promises
you make to
your workers,''
the president
said. ''If
you offer a
private pension
plan to your
employees,
you have a
duty to set
aside enough
money now so
your workers
will get what
they've been
promised when
they retire.''
At
the same time,
the law recognizes
the evolution
in workers'
benefits --
a gradual disappearance
of pensions
in favor of
savings accounts
such as 401(k)s
that require
workers to
amass their
own retirement
savings.
Those
accounts, also
known as defined
contribution
plans, got
a boost in
the new law.
It is this
step that many
expect will
do the most
over time to
help people
working toward
retirement.
The
law lets employers
automatically
enroll workers
in 401(k) plans.
In addition,
there is a
mechanism to
increase gradually
the amount
saved, and
employers are
encouraged
to match some
of the dollars
that workers
stash away.
A
nonprofit research
organization,
the Retirement
Security Project,
estimated that
the change,
when fully
in effect,
could mean
employees will
save an additional
$10 billion
to $15 billion
in 401(k) accounts
each year.
''Those
additional
contributions
will bolster
retirement
security for
millions of
workers,''
said Peter
Orszag, director
of the project,
which works
to improve
retirement
benefits for
low- and middle-income
workers.
Some
changes were
sparked by
corporate scandals
that saw workers,
who had put
much of their
nest egg in
company stock,
lose their
retirement
savings. The
new law requires
companies to
give their
workers more
investment
options.
The
law is not
without its
critics, some
of whom say
it does nothing
to encourage
employers to
offer pension
benefits and
the reliable
income they
give retirees.
Rep.
Charles Rangel
of New York,
the top Democrat
on the House
Ways and Means
Committee,
said lawmakers
may look back
at the law
as the ''Trojan
horse that
brought the
end of the
defined benefit
pension system.''
''Erosion
of the defined
benefit pension
system represents
a dangerous
shift from
a 'we' society
to a 'me' society,
where every
worker is on
his or her
own,'' he said.
The
ERISA Industry
Committee,
which represents
the retirement,
health and
compensation
plans of the
nation's largest
employers,
said the number
of defined
benefit pension
plans fell
from 112,000
in 1985 to
fewer than
30,000 in 2004.
Of
those still
in place, the
group said,
many are closed
to new participants
or frozen,
preventing
employees from
earning new
benefits.
''With
each past reform
-- often based
on government
revenue needs
-- employers
have exited
the defined
benefit system
as a result
of the governments
changes, which
often resulted
in burdensome
and costly
regulations,''
said Mark Ugoretz,
the committee's
president.
Leaders
hope these
revisions will
prevent a costly
taxpayer bailout
of the federal
agency that
insures the
pension system,
the Pension
Benefit Guaranty
Corp. Some
fear taxpayers
will pay if
too many companies
dump their
plans at once.
''Every
American has
an interest
in seeing this
system fixed,
whether you're
a worker at
a company with
an underfunded
pension or
a taxpayer
who might get
stuck with
the bill,''
Bush said.
The
law also:
--gives
airlines that
are in bankruptcy
proceedings
and have frozen
their pensions
an extra 10
years, or 17
years total,
to meet their
funding obligations.
Others with
active plans
get 10 years
to meet their
obligations.
--requires
companies to
give employees
more information
about their
pensions.
--puts
certain ''hybrid''
plans, which
have been challenged
as discriminating
against older
workers, on
stronger legal
footing.
--says
companies with
seriously underfunded
plans cannot
promise their
workers bigger
benefits.
--makes
permanent the
higher savings
contribution
limits that
were set to
expire in the
next decade.
People can
now put more
money in their
IRA and 401(k)
accounts in
the coming
years. That
includes a
new option
made available
this year known
as Roth 401(k)s.
Those accounts
let workers
pay tax on
their earnings
before saving,
but the money
then accumulates
and can be
spent in retirement
tax-free.
The
Human Rights
Campaign praised
the law for
changes that
the group said
will help same-sex
couples by
expanding benefits
once only allowed
for spouses
or dependents.
Bush
praised the
measure for
enacting the
most sweeping
overhaul in
more than 30
years. But
he said the
changes must
be coupled
with revisions
to the two
government
programs that
benefit retirees,
Social Security
and Medicare.
''As
more baby boomers
stop contributing
payroll taxes
and start collecting
benefits --
people like
me -- it will
create an enormous
strain on our
programs,''
said Bush,
who turned
60 last month.
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