More than 3 million people are enrolled in frozen single-employer
defined-benefit plans, according to a new GAO report.
The most common reasons executives gave for freezing their plans included the
impact of annual contributions on their firm’s cash flows and the
unpredictability of plan funding, according to the Government Accountability
Office.
Among pension plans surveyed, 23 percent involved a hard freeze, in which all
future benefit accruals cease. Twenty-two percent involved a partial freeze.
Also, 83 percent of the companies with frozen plans offered alternative
retirement savings arrangements.
“As businesses struggle in this economy to pony up more money than they’ve
ever had to contribute before because of the [Pension Protection Act’s] stiffer
funding requirements, I fear that the spike in pension freezes will rise even
more,” Rep. Earl Pomeroy, D-North Dakota, who was among legislators who
requested the GAO report, said in a news release. “Some argue that higher
funding would be good for workers, but there is a hitch — private-sector
pensions are voluntary.”
The GAO received responses from 48 DB plan officials of the 471 executives
contacted.
This story was filed by Jennifer Byrd of Pensions & Investments, a sister
publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.