How Do Pension Funds Work? (2024)

The most common type of traditional pension is a defined-benefit plan. After employees retire, they receive monthly benefits from the plan, based on a percentage of their average salary over their last few years of employment. The formula also takes into account how many years they worked for that company. Employers, and sometimes employees, contribute to fund those benefits.

As an example, a pension plan might pay 1% of their average salary for the final five years of employment for each year of the person's service at the employer. So an employee with 35 years of service at that company and an average final-years salary of $50,000 would receive $17,500 a year.

Key Takeaways

  • Traditional defined-benefit pension plans are vanishing from the retirement landscape, especially among private employers, but many still exist.
  • Pension plans are funded by contributions from employers and occasionally from employees.
  • Public employee pension plans tend to be more generous than ones from private employers.
  • Private pension plans are subject to federal regulation and eligible for coverage by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.

How Pension Funds Work

For some years now traditional pension plans have been gradually disappearing from the private sector. Public sector employees—such as government workers—are the largest group with active and growing pension funds.

You can't usually take early withdrawals or loans from your pension. Private pension plans offered by corporations or other employers seldom have a cost-of-living escalator to adjust for inflation, so the benefits they pay can decline in spending power over the years.

Public employee pension plans tend to be more generous than private ones. For example, the nation’s largest pension plan, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), pays 2% per year in many instances. In that case, an employee with 35 years of service and an average salary of $50,000 could receive $35,000 annually. In addition, public pension plans usually have a cost-of-living escalator.

How Pension Plans Are Regulated and Insured

There are two basic types of private pension plans: single-employer plans and multi-employer plans. The latter typically cover unionized workers who may work for several employers.

Both types of private plans are subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974. It aimed to put pensions on a more solid financial footing and also established the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC).

The PBGC acts as a pension insurance fund: Employers pay the PBGC an annual premium for each participant, and the PBGC guarantees that employees will receive retirement and other benefits if the pension fails and cannot pay.

The PBGC won't necessarily pay the full amount retirees would have received if their plans had continued to operate. Instead, it pays up to certain maximums, which can change from year to year.

In 2024, the maximum amount guaranteed for a 65-year-old retiree in a single-employer plan who takes their benefit as a straight life annuity is $7,107.95 per month. Multi-employer plan benefits are calculated differently, guaranteeing, for example, up to $12,870 a year for someone with 30 years of service.

ERISA does not cover public pension funds, which instead follow the rules established by state governments and sometimes state constitutions. The federal government also operates pensions for its employees which are regulated as well. Nor does the PBGC insure public plans. In most states, taxpayers are responsible for picking up the bill if a public employee plan is unable to meet its obligations.

How Pension Funds Invest Their Money

ERISA does not dictate a pension plan’s specific investments. However, ERISA does require plan sponsors to operate as fiduciaries. That means they must put their clients' (the future retirees) interests ahead of their own.

By law, the investments they make are supposed to be both prudent and diversified in a manner that is intended to prevent significant losses.

The traditional investing strategy for a pension fund is to split its assets among bonds, stocks, and real estate.

An emerging trend is to put some money into alternative investments, in search of higher returns and greater diversity. Those investments include private equity, hedge funds, commodities, derivatives, and high-yield bonds.

Important

The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 includes provisions to help the PBGC strengthen financially troubled multi-employer plans through the year 2051.

The State of Pension Funds Today

While some pension funds are in solid shape today, many others are not. For private pension plans, those numbers are reflected in the financial obligations taken on by their insurer, the PBGC.

At the end of its 2022 fiscal year, the PBGC had a net surplus of $37.6 billion. That consisted of a $36.6 billion surplus in its single-employer program, and a $1.1 billion surplus in its multi-employer program. Obviously, $1.1 billion is getting close to deficit territory.

The Congressional Research Service notes that the condition of the multi-employer program has worsened recently.

The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 attempts to remedy this. It includes provisions intended to help the PBGC strengthen multi-employer plans. Plans that face serious financial trouble are eligible to apply for special assistance in the form of a single, lump-sum payment calculated to cover the plan's obligations through the year 2051. Rather than insurance premiums, the money to fund this program is to come from the U.S. Treasury's general tax revenues.

State and local pension plans also present a mixed picture. While a handful of state plans have 100% of the funding they need to pay their estimated future benefits, most have considerably less. 2023 saw slight improvements to the pension fund situation. However, large problems still exist. Overall, the percent of funded liabilities improved, and reached 78.1% during 2023. Unfunded liabilities declined to $1.44 trillion. Obviously, problems remain, despite a change in the positive direction.

How Do Pension Funds Work? (2024)
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