This Note focuses on the problems that often arise for plan participants when an overfunded defined benefit plan is terminated and the employer recaptures excess assets. Part I explains the relative ease with which employers can terminate plans and receive excess assets under current pension law. Part II argues that pension law must be reformed because its shortcomings threaten American workers\u27 retirement income security, it allows for sham terminations that remove assets from plans that are, in fact, ongoing, and it usually allows excess assets to go to employers rather than employees. Part III discusses two reforms proposed for plan terminations and asset reversions, which are the Plan Termination and Reversion Control Act of 1985, an...
This chapter surveys the issues facing policymakers and workers’ organizations thinking about rebuil...
[Excerpt] Recent high-profile terminations of defined benefit pension plans have focused attention o...
This comment examines how the Bankruptcy Code undermines the retirement security goals of ERISA and ...
This Note examines whether early retirement benefits are included among the liabilities that an empl...
This Comment addresses the debate within Congress and the pension community over the disposition of ...
This paper examines the relative importance of transfers from workers to shareholders in the firm&ap...
Congress passed the Pension Protection Act of 2006 to provide economic security for millions of Amer...
This short paper reviews the current state of the law governing recoupment actions for defined benef...
In Bankruptcy and Workers: Risks, Compensation and Pension Contracts, the excellent Article that anc...
This project helps to demonstrate how pension actuaries must keep a constant eye on new laws. The pe...
This Note investigates more fully the policies animating ERISA in order to ascribe an appropriate co...
In 1963, the termination of the Studebaker Corporation’s pension plan wiped out or significantly red...
Federal law both cultivates and regulates employer-sponsored pension plans in the United States. Som...
This study quantifies the possible consequences to stakeholders of reforms to the excise tax on reve...
Part I of this Note provides general background information about pension plans and details the prob...
This chapter surveys the issues facing policymakers and workers’ organizations thinking about rebuil...
[Excerpt] Recent high-profile terminations of defined benefit pension plans have focused attention o...
This comment examines how the Bankruptcy Code undermines the retirement security goals of ERISA and ...
This Note examines whether early retirement benefits are included among the liabilities that an empl...
This Comment addresses the debate within Congress and the pension community over the disposition of ...
This paper examines the relative importance of transfers from workers to shareholders in the firm&ap...
Congress passed the Pension Protection Act of 2006 to provide economic security for millions of Amer...
This short paper reviews the current state of the law governing recoupment actions for defined benef...
In Bankruptcy and Workers: Risks, Compensation and Pension Contracts, the excellent Article that anc...
This project helps to demonstrate how pension actuaries must keep a constant eye on new laws. The pe...
This Note investigates more fully the policies animating ERISA in order to ascribe an appropriate co...
In 1963, the termination of the Studebaker Corporation’s pension plan wiped out or significantly red...
Federal law both cultivates and regulates employer-sponsored pension plans in the United States. Som...
This study quantifies the possible consequences to stakeholders of reforms to the excise tax on reve...
Part I of this Note provides general background information about pension plans and details the prob...
This chapter surveys the issues facing policymakers and workers’ organizations thinking about rebuil...
[Excerpt] Recent high-profile terminations of defined benefit pension plans have focused attention o...
This comment examines how the Bankruptcy Code undermines the retirement security goals of ERISA and ...