Federal law both cultivates and regulates employer-sponsored pension plans in the United States. Some believe that because employers have been migrating away from traditional defined benefit pension plans in the United States, the plan cultivation provisions of federal law have failed to encourage U.S. employers to offer pension benefits to their employees. However, Congress has allowed each employer to decide for itself whether to provide pension benefits to its employees and, if so, what kind of pension benefits to provide. Employers appear to have migrated away from traditional defined benefit plans primarily because employers have concluded that defined contribution plans and some hybrid plans are more compatible with their own interest...
Here we provide an overview to a set of papers that analyze various facets of the shift to cash bala...
Employers have moved from traditional pension plans to cash balance and other alternative defined be...
About half of all workers in the United States participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan ...
In 1963, the termination of the Studebaker Corporation’s pension plan wiped out or significantly red...
The shifting pension landscape raises questions about the financial security of future retirees. Abo...
For nearly two decades, employers have been restructuring traditional defined benefit pension plans ...
Much of the commentary on the new pension reform law suggests that it will be deleterious to defined...
Under the traditional approach to defined benefit plans, well-intended disciplinary and regulatory r...
This chapter surveys the issues facing policymakers and workers’ organizations thinking about rebuil...
The conversion of traditional defined benefit pension plans to cash balance plans has caused conside...
In the thirty years since the introduction of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, tremendou...
Considerable research on the causes underlying the decline of defined-benefit pension plans and grow...
Labor unions played an historic role creating the occupational pension system in the private and pub...
Defined benefit plans remain the predominant form of retirement benefit for employees of state and l...
Defined benefit (DB) plans have been applauded as the mainstay of the US pension system for many yea...
Here we provide an overview to a set of papers that analyze various facets of the shift to cash bala...
Employers have moved from traditional pension plans to cash balance and other alternative defined be...
About half of all workers in the United States participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan ...
In 1963, the termination of the Studebaker Corporation’s pension plan wiped out or significantly red...
The shifting pension landscape raises questions about the financial security of future retirees. Abo...
For nearly two decades, employers have been restructuring traditional defined benefit pension plans ...
Much of the commentary on the new pension reform law suggests that it will be deleterious to defined...
Under the traditional approach to defined benefit plans, well-intended disciplinary and regulatory r...
This chapter surveys the issues facing policymakers and workers’ organizations thinking about rebuil...
The conversion of traditional defined benefit pension plans to cash balance plans has caused conside...
In the thirty years since the introduction of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, tremendou...
Considerable research on the causes underlying the decline of defined-benefit pension plans and grow...
Labor unions played an historic role creating the occupational pension system in the private and pub...
Defined benefit plans remain the predominant form of retirement benefit for employees of state and l...
Defined benefit (DB) plans have been applauded as the mainstay of the US pension system for many yea...
Here we provide an overview to a set of papers that analyze various facets of the shift to cash bala...
Employers have moved from traditional pension plans to cash balance and other alternative defined be...
About half of all workers in the United States participate in an employer-sponsored retirement plan ...