
The 1964 termination of the Studebaker Corporation's pension plan wiped out or significantly reduced the pensions of thousands of the automaker's employees and retirees. In response, the US Congress passed the 1974 Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), a monumental and revolutionary piece of legislation crafted to address corporate pension underfunding. The bill also set new rules regarding defined benefit (DB) and other retirement plans, and it established the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation as a government-run insurer to serve as a backdrop to U.S. corporate pensions.Despite the bill's far-ranging scope, in the decades since its passage, it has become evident that ERISA failed to achieve many of its intended objectives. The corporate pension scene today is in turmoil, and most private employers have terminated or frozen their traditional DB plans. In their place, employers are increasingly substituting defined contribution (DC) retirement saving plans, which pose a new set of responsibilities on employees and their firms.This volume investigates how and why traditional approaches to pension risk management have failed, and we also explore the new mechanisms required to strengthen retirement security for the future. Lessons from international experience are also included, ranging from Singapore to Switzerland, and the Netherlands to Australia.
This volume investigates the systemic failure of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) to secure corporate pensions and proposes new mechanisms to ensure retirement stability over the next four decades. Olivia S. Mitchell and Richard C. Shea leverage their expertise in pension economics and legal policy to analyze the transition from defined benefit plans to defined contribution models. The authors argue that the current regulatory framework is insufficient for modern economic realities and advocate for structural reforms to address the shifting burden of retirement risk from employers to individual employees.
What You Will Find
Experts in the field of pension policy recognize this work as a critical examination of the limitations inherent in current U.S. retirement legislation. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the practical value of the international case studies provided by the authors.
Page Count:
376
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198755449
ISBN-13:
9780198755449
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