Defined Benefit Plans
A defined benefit plan is one set up to provide a predetermined
retirement benefit to employees or their beneficiaries, either as
a certain dollar amount each month, or a percentage of compensation.
Employer
contributions to a defined benefit plan are very complex to determine
and require the work of an actuary. The assets of the plan are held
in a pool, rather than individual accounts for each employee, and
as a result, the employees have no voice in investment decisions.
Once the plan is established, the employer must continue to fund
it, even if the company has no profits in a given year. Since the
employer makes a specific promise to pay a certain sum in the future,
it is the employer who assumes the risk of fluctuations in the value
of the investment pool.
The maximum annual contribution you can make in 2014
to a defined benefit plan is one that would be projected to yield
a benefit equal to the lesser of $210,000 or 100 percent of the participant's
average compensation for the three highest consecutive years.
Very
few defined benefit plans provide for the benefits to be adjusted
each year to reflect the effects of inflation (called the Cost of
Living Adjustment, or COLA), so over the years of your retirement,
the value or purchasing power of your benefits may shrink considerably.
The
Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC). With a defined
benefit plan, the employer is legally required to make sure there
is enough money in the plan to pay the guaranteed benefits. If the
company fails to meet its obligation, the federal government steps
in. Defined benefit plans are the only type of pension insured by
the PBGC. The insurance works similarly to the federal deposit insurance
that backs up your bank accounts. If your plan is covered and the
sponsoring company goes bust, PBGC will take over benefit payments
up to a maximum amount. The insurance protection helps make your
pension more secure, but it is not a full guarantee that you will
get what you expected.
© 2024 Wolters Kluwer. All Rights Reserved.