What to Do if Your Pension is Frozen
What to Do if Your Pension is Frozen
For workers who have stayed with a firm because of promised pension benefits, a frozen pension can be a big financial hit. Businesses determine pension payouts using a formula that looks at years of service and an individual's peak salary over a number of years. Someone who is 50, for example, could reasonably expect higher earnings over the 15 years before retirement, so a pension freeze at 50 could mean a big benefit cut. "It really damages a person in the mid to late portion of their career,” says Jean-Pierre Aubry, associate director of state and local research at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.
What to Do If Your Pension Plan Is Frozen
General Electric is among the latest companies to reduce future retiree benefits
Getty Images The traditional three-legged stool of retirement — pensions, Social Security and savings — is rapidly losing one leg, and that change could leave your retirement plans wobbly. If you've been counting on a corporate pension, make sure you know what to do if that pension gets frozen. The latest example is General Electric (GE), which announced on Oct. 7 that it would freeze its pension for about 20,700 salaried employees. It's offering buyouts to 100,000 former workers who haven't started getting pension benefits yet. When a company freezes its pension plan, that typically means the employees won't be able to accumulate any additional future benefits after the freeze takes effect, which is what GE has done. Retired workers who are already receiving benefits are not affected by pension freezes. GE shut its pension to new employees in 2012. Those workers who are in the plan now will no longer accrue new benefits after Dec. 31, but they won't lose any pension benefits they have earned up to that point. To offset some loss of additional pension accruals, GE employees will get an extra 2 percent of their salaries in their 401(k) savings plans for two years.Two-thirds of plans eliminated since 1983
Like many other companies, GE used its pension to attract and keep workers, but corporate pensions, in general, are rapidly disappearing. The number of corporate pension plans with 100 or more members has fallen from almost 26,000 in 1983, the peak, to about 8,400 in 2016, according to the most recent data available from the U.S. Department of Labor. That's a drop of two-thirds in about 35 years. Other major companies that recently have frozen their pension plans include DuPont, IBM and L.L.Bean.For workers who have stayed with a firm because of promised pension benefits, a frozen pension can be a big financial hit. Businesses determine pension payouts using a formula that looks at years of service and an individual's peak salary over a number of years. Someone who is 50, for example, could reasonably expect higher earnings over the 15 years before retirement, so a pension freeze at 50 could mean a big benefit cut. "It really damages a person in the mid to late portion of their career,” says Jean-Pierre Aubry, associate director of state and local research at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.