Guest post by a concerned citizen
Established in 1974 during the Ford administration as part of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) emerged from the ashes of private pension crises, particularly those devastating retirements in the automotive industry, leaving workers adrift without their promised benefits.
The PBGC’s role is to insure private-sector defined benefit pensions, encompassing both single-employer and multi-employer union plans.
Currently, the PBGC backs pensions for approximately 33 million individuals across 25,000 plans, which translates to about 11% of the U.S. workforce. The other 89% depend on Social Security and personal savings, lacking a similar safety net. Notably, when the PBGC was founded, a quarter of U.S. workers were union members.
The PBGC collects premiums from these pension plans, yet the guarantees it provides often fall short: retirees may receive merely 20-25% of their expected benefits if the PBGC must step in. Despite its funding model, the PBGC has left taxpayers exposed to significant liabilities.
The glaring case of the $40 billion bailout of the Teamsters’ Central States Pension Fund in 2021 stands as a particularly outrageous instance. Here, taxpayers who lack defined benefit pensions are effectively subsidizing union pensions, some of which have a less-than-stellar history, including brazen theft by organized crime.
Presently, nearly 130 union plans, affecting 1.2 million participants, are in jeopardy or receiving severely reduced pensions.
Although the enabling legislation does not expressly guarantee these pensions with the full backing of the U.S. Treasury, over time there has been a tacit implication of such support, akin to the support seen for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
If left unchecked, PBGC risks deteriorating into yet another financial safety net that disproportionately safeguards select groups at the detriment of others.
Financial Snapshot
- The PBGC’s multi-employer program faced a staggering reported deficit exceeding $63 billion before the 2021 bailout, marking it as one of the most underfunded federal insurance initiatives.
- Each year, as new union members join these failing plans, taxpayer liabilities continue to swell. Rather than transitioning new members to defined contribution plans, the financial exposure only amplifies for the federal government to potentially bail out these plans, reflecting the precedent established by the Central States pension.
- The single-employer program, while in a comparatively better state, only appears to possess surpluses because the agency disburses substantially reduced benefits relative to original pension commitments.
- The PBGC’s “insurance” model fails to fulfill its intended purpose: the premiums collected do not accurately represent the risks associated with chronically underfunded plans, thus socializing losses while privatizing profits for mismanaged pensions.
- Notably, premiums for single-employer plans (think large corporations) are significantly higher than those for multi-employer plans (unions), as if they operate in entirely different realms. Current legislation prohibits one category from subsidizing the other, resulting in a scenario where well-funded single employer plans cannot assist underfunded union plans.
Legal and Constitutional Challenges
The very framework of the PBGC raises significant constitutional inquiries:
- A clear constitutional basis for the federal government to endorse private pension guarantees is conspicuously absent. Congress lacks explicit authority in this area.
- Operating as a federal corporation bound by D.C.’s small business laws, PBGC further complicates the line between federal responsibility and private obligations. This set-up appears to sidestep accountability and may invite legal challenges, particularly as it relies on taxpayer funds without typical oversight.
The Emergence of Moral Hazard
The functioning of the PBGC skews the retirement savings landscape, misdirects taxpayer resources, and incentivizes negligent pension administration. By continuing its existence, PBGC ensures that any future pension crises—whether stemming from mismanagement, corruption, or changes in the economy—will shift the burden onto taxpayers, who often find themselves without similar safeguards.
Recommended Strategies for PBGC’s Disbandment or Transition
Several viable strategies could effectively dismantle PBGC while safeguarding current beneficiaries and taxpayers:
- Transitioning Responsibilities to the Private Sector
Shift PBGC’s responsibilities to private insurers and pension administrators equipped to handle pensions and annuities efficiently. Industry leaders like Vanguard, State Street, and Fidelity could be licensed to provide pension guarantee services under rigorous Department of Labor scrutiny, aligning risk responsibility with adept managers while eliminating federal guarantees. - Delegating to Labor Unions
Reassign the duty of insuring multi-employer pensions back to the unions that negotiate these benefits. Unions might adopt self-insurance models through pooled risk strategies, compelling them to properly price the obligations of pension promises and ensure accountability. Congress could introduce measures to protect retirees from opportunistic capitalists and union mismanagement through transparent financial disclosures and the migration to defined contribution plans post a union and retiree vote upon hitting a specific threshold of unfunded liabilities (e.g., 65%). - Curtailing Activities and Reallocating Functions
The PBGC’s scope could be substantially reduced:- Legal and enforcement responsibilities could be reassigned to the Department of Justice.
- Premium collection and pension disbursement would shift to the Treasury Department, utilizing existing payment frameworks.
- The PBGC currently spends $1 million annually to outsource check mailing when the Treasury already oversees vast direct payments—an obvious redundancy.
- Remaining pension oversight might transition to the Department of Labor, ensuring compliance with funding and fiduciary standards devoid of federal guarantees.
- This redistribution of functions could yield savings estimated at $200 million yearly, potentially avoiding $2 billion over a decade, with redirected funds addressing the PBGC’s $60 billion funding shortfall.
- Gradual Phased Wind-Down with Benefits Payouts
Congress could legislate a closure timeline for the PBGC, mandating a phased wind-down period allowing plans to:- Re-allocate premiums back to their respective union pension portfolios.
- Facilitate participant access to private annuities.
- Shift to defined contribution accounts, directly distributing assets to the participants.
- Liquidate and pay out the current value of guaranteed benefits.
A transitional fund, enabled by current PBGC assets and a final risk-based evaluation of remaining plans, could ensure a smooth closure.
- Establishing State or Regional Pension Guarantee Associations
Devolving pension guarantee responsibilities to state governments would align with their broader purview over insurance and retirement frameworks, restoring constitutional integrity and fostering solutions tailored to local labor dynamics.
The PBGC epitomizes a distinctly unsuccessful venture into federal pension insurance, replete with legal ambiguities, moral hazards, and fiscal inefficiencies.
Perpetual taxpayer involvement in private pension risks is neither justifiable nor sustainable. It’s high time for a serious reassessment of this framework to avert yet another sweeping federal bailout spurred by a pension crisis.