Thu, May 24, 2012, 8:11 AM EDT - U.S. Markets open in 1 hr 19 mins

Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Retirement Heist! U.S. Pensions Plundered By Corporate Greed, Author Says

    Follow The Daily Ticker on Facebook here!

    It's pretty obvious times are tough for America's working class. The combination of a prolonged period of stagnant wages, high unemployment and shaky economy - including a decade of little or no returns (if you're lucky) on assets like stocks and real estate - make it harder to pay the bills. (See: As America's Middle Class Shrinks, P&G Adopts "Hourglass" Strategy)

    Meanwhile, New York Times columnist and economist Paul Krugman, noted in a piece last week titled "The Social Contract," that while the middle gets squeezed, the rich keep getting richer in both real and relative terms.

    "...the Congressional Budget Office — which only go up to 2005, but the basic picture surely hasn't changed —show that between 1979 and 2005 the inflation-adjusted income of families in the middle of the income distribution rose 21 percent. That's growth, but it's slow, especially compared with the 100 percent rise in median income over a generation after World War II. Meanwhile, over the same period, the income of the very rich, the top 100th of 1 percent of the income distribution, rose by 480 percent. No, that isn't a misprint. In 2005 dollars, the average annual income of that group rose from $4.2 million to $24.3 million."

    If the average worker didn't have enough to worry about, Ellen Schultz - an award-winning Wall Street Journal reporter and author of Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit from the Nest Eggs of American Workers -- says that in some instances the fat paychecks of the top paid executives are coming directly out of the pocket of average workers.

    "As recently as a decade ago there was a trillion dollars, a quarter of a trillion in surplus assets," in corporate funds, Schultz tells The Daily Ticker's Aaron Task in the accompanying clip. "There was plenty of money in pension plans; there was plenty to pay the benefits but corporations went about taking the money away."

    As the title of the book suggests, Schultz believes this was no accident, claiming corporations have been "exaggerating their retiree burdens" and plundering retirement plans in a variety of ways, including:

    • Siphon billions of dollars from their pension plans to finance downsizings and sell the assets in merger deals.
    • Overstate the burden of rank-and-file retiree obligations to justify benefits cuts, while simultaneously using the savings to inflate executive pay and pensions.
    • Hide growing executive pension liabilities, which at some companies now exceed the liabilities for the regular pension plans.
    • Purchase billions of dollars of life insurance on workers and use the policies as informal executive pension funds. When the insured workers and retirees die, the company collects tax-free death benefits.
    • Exclude millions of low-paid workers from 401(k)'s to make the plans more valuable to the top-paid.

    According to Schultz, these and related measures have become commonplace among Fortune 500 companies, including AT&T, Bank of America, JP Morgan, IBM, Cigna, General Motors, GM, Comcast, UPS and the NFL, just to name a few.

    U.S. corporate pension plans now face a $388 billion gap based on a recent report from Credit Suisse. That's a bigger hole than they faced at the height of the financial crisis. Companies claim it's a result of the 2008-09 stock market crash, higher costs and an aging workforce.

    Schultz claims that's bogus. "It didn't have to happen," she says, noting executive compensation has risen dramatically over the same time frame. "As they've cut other people's benefits with pensions being frozen, they have increased the benefits of the executives both pay and pensions."

    Unfortunately, there isn't much the average employee can do because what the corporations have done is legal and abetted by loopholes in accounting regulations. The only advice she offers is to be skeptical if you're offered a buyout. That means conferring with an actuary to guarantee the pay structure is as advertised.

    Yahoo! Poll

    Will Congress get anything accomplished before the November elections?

    Loading...
    Poll Choice Options
    • Yes
    • No
     
     
    Top Locations Richardson

    507 comments

    • Yisthisimportant  •  Richardson, Texas  •  23 days ago
      IAM of Lockheed in Fort Worth is striking over this very issue
    • virginia  •  6 months ago
      Look up your Strawman.com information and your ICC forms. Take back your Strawman Acct. or Corporation it is your and the money in the Federal Reserve. AMEN
    • Al and H  •  7 months ago
      As the title of the book suggests, Schultz believes this was no accident, claiming corporations have been "exaggerating their retiree burdens" and plundering retirement plans in a variety of ways, including:

      •Siphon billions of dollars from their pension plans to finance downsizings and sell the assets in merger deals.
      •Overstate the burden of rank-and-file retiree obligations to justify benefits cuts, while simultaneously using the savings to inflate executive pay and pensions.
      •Hide growing executive pension liabilities, which at some companies now exceed the liabilities for the regular pension plans.
      •Purchase billions of dollars of life insurance on workers and use the policies as informal executive pension funds. When the insured workers and retirees die, the company collects tax-free death benefits.
      •Exclude millions of low-paid workers from 401(k)'s to make the plans more valuable to the top-paid.
      According to Schultz, these and related measures have become commonplace among Fortune 500 companies, including AT&T, Bank of America, JP Morgan, IBM, Cigna, General Motors, GM, Comcast, UPS and the NFL, just to name a few.

      U.S. corporate pension plans now face a $388 billion gap based on a recent report from Credit Suisse. That's a bigger hole than they faced at the height of the financial crisis. Companies claim it's a result of the 2008-09 stock market crash, higher costs and an aging workforce.

      Schultz claims that's bogus. "It didn't have to happen," she says, noting executive compensation has risen dramatically over the same time frame. "As they've cut other people's benefits with pensions being frozen, they have increased the benefits of the executives both pay and pensions."

      Unfortunately, there isn't much the average employee can do because what the corporations have done is legal and abetted by loopholes in accounting regulations.
      • COaunt 7 months ago
        I'm sorry, what was the point of your post? All I see is a repeat of the bottom part of the article.
    • george  •  7 months ago
      Like Herman Cain says its all our fault we should all just become CEO's, how stupid.
      Congress is paid by CEO's congress will do what ever CEO's tell them to do. THe GOP will always take care of the 1% who pay them.
      • jeb654 7 months ago
        You're a fool if you think this is limited to the GOP. Many of Obama's very best buddies are among the worst offenders. Raines, Johnson not to mention the fat cat union bosses that have been robbing you blind.

        Enjoy the Kool Aid, but it's really donkey pee.
    • OCRSUCKS  •  7 months ago
      Execute all senior management.
      • Tony 7 months ago
        Would that be an executive decision?.
    • Everett  •  8 months ago
      Yes... the 'feds' have plundered the Social Security 'fund' and continue to do so today. But surely you recognize that the 'feds' is us. We continue to elect the same collection of thieves from the two national parties to go to Washington and be the 'feds', where they supposedly represent 'We the People'... that's us. And we continue to allow these 'representatives', and the media, to distract us with lies about minor issues as though politics is just another reality show. This disaster is of our own making. As Pogo said 60 years ago... "We have met the enemy and he is us."
      • Dan 8 months ago
        The Feds have not plundered the social security fund, they have invested it in US gov't bonds and securities. Any conservative investment advisor would do the same.
      • mike 8 months ago
        Ya the oath is to the party not the country so sad.
      • Charles 8 months ago
        The federal bank is a separate entity from the us government you tart.
    • PC  •  7 months ago
      I see a revolution or civil war on the horizon. America used to be a great country but it is now run by greedy executives who "own" all of the politicians. The Republicans continue to support the cries of big business for less regulation. We tried that during the previous administrations and it obviously failed. I'm surprised at how stupid the wealthy are in this country not to realize you should at least try to look like you care about the middle class and the poor.
      • Tony 7 months ago
        It's not the wealthy who are stupid, but those who vote for the party that puts the welfare of the wealthy above all other considerations, i.e. those who vote republican.
    • Robert  •  8 months ago
      Not surprising and trajic!
    • Mozart  •  8 months ago
      An aquaintance of mine used to work for a major airline. As part of the merger of this airline, the pension was taken over by the Federal Pension Gurantee Fund. People who had worked for this airline for 30 years, and who were counting on and budgeting for retirement, all of a sudden found that their pension had been cut in half. Not to mention the tens of thousands of retirees, who had to figure out how to make due with half what they had been getting in benefits. This has happened repeatedly, as the wealthy executives used this pension ploy to enrich themselves at the cost of the workers.
    • Rabid Dog  •  8 months ago
      Been saying this for over 30 years....
    • shane  •  8 months ago
      No one denies the raise in risk and accountability for CEO's. What is still surprising is the horribly written contracts for these CEO's. Getting paid to drive a company into the ground is simply bad business. Compensation based on short term actions is also bad business.

      If a CEO is compensated at 50 mil per year but takes a 10% cut in pay, how many new jobs would be created with it? Imagine the 10% on the top 5 levels and then sum the number of jobs created. Could those new jobs be assigned to R&D to develop new products?
    • AlK  •  8 months ago
      Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI lost their heads for a good reason, a few heads need to roll here in America.
    • Ronald  •  8 months ago
      American politicians are not capable of identifying the problems, so how can they ever come up with solutions.
    • RickT  •  8 months ago
      So change the laws to make it a Federal felony to raid corporate pension funds like this.
    • rye r  •  8 months ago
      I liked it when the interviewer asked the question, "was taking this pension money legal?" Too funny of question, Taking money that does NOT belong to you is always illegal and it always stealing - PERIOD!!
    • Yahoo! Finac  •  8 months ago
      CONGERSS is like a rotting fish it stinks all the way through.
    • GARRYG  •  8 months ago
      if you want talk about plundening look what the feds have done to the social security fund
    • Irene P  •  7 months ago
      And yet the repubs fight regulation on anything, if the company fails then the CEO deserves to lose his or her money as well.
    • scott b  •  8 months ago
      btw for those of you distracted by the social security and medicare non argument, the real issue was congress allowing companies to skip out on defined benefit plans in favor of 401k plans. just another example of sheeple missing the important point and being misdirected by the non issue. what exactly do people think would happen to the economy if no ss checks went out? you think demand is low now, lmao at what it would be without ss
    • Don  •  8 months ago
      Like a spider sucking the juice out of a captured fat bug, they suck the juice out of the retirement funds the same way our gov. sucked it out of Social Security. Both will expect a bailout by the already depleated middle class taxpayer and the retiree.

    FOLLOW THE DAILY TICKER

    The Daily Ticker covers the most important business stories of the day -- the economy, investing, corporate leadership and politics. The Daily Ticker picks up where Tech Ticker left off and is hosted by Aaron Task, Henry Blodget and Daniel Gross. Often serious, sometimes irreverent and always interesting, The Daily Ticker gives viewers a unique take on the business world's most crucial stories.

    Subscribe and RSS

    [X]

    How to subscribe

    Roll over each section to subscribe using Add to My Yahoo! or RSS Feed feeds.

    Yahoo! News offers dozens of RSS feeds you can read in My Yahoo! or using third-party RSS news reader software. Click here to find out more about RSS and how you can use it with Yahoo! News.
     
    Recent Quotes
    Symbol Price Change % Chg 
    Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
    You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
     
    Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.