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Forecasts
& Strategies
Personal Snapshots
December 2000
What
If Social Security Was Like a 401(k)?
by Mark Skousen
"Of
all social institutions, business is the only one created
for the express purpose of making and managing change....
Government is a poor manager." -Peter F. Drucker, "The Sickness
of Government," The Age of Discontinuity (1969)
In
the ongoing debate over the privatization of Social Security,
one story has been overlooked: The private sector in the United
States has already solved its own pension fund crisis by converting
their old "defined benefit" plans into individualized 401(k)s.
Here's
the story: After World War II, major U.S. companies added
generous pension plans to their employee benefit programs.
These "defined benefit" plans largely imitated the federal
government's Social Security plan. Companies placed funds
into a large investment pool based on employees' salaries,
the trust fund was managed by company officials, and a monthly
retirement income was projected for all employees when they
retired at age 65.
The
Old Pension Plan System Fails
But
over the years, corporate executives recognized serious difficulties
with their traditional pension plans, similar to the problems
Social Security faces today. Corporations confronted huge
unfunded liabilities as retirees lived longer and managers
invested too conservatively in government bonds and blue-chip
"old economy" stocks. Newer employees were also angered when
they changed jobs or were laid off and didn't have the required
"vested" years to receive benefits from the company pension
plan. Unlike Social Security, most corporate plans were not
transferable. The Employment Retirement Income Security ACT
(ERISA), passed in 1974, imposed regulations on the industry
in an attempt to protect pension rights, but the headaches,
red tape and lawsuits grew during an era of downsizing, job
mobility and longer life expectancies.
The
New Individualized Solution
The
new corporate solution was a spin-off of another legislative
invention-the Individual Retirement Account (IRA). The 401(k)
rapidly became the business pension of choice, and there is
no turning back. These "defined contribution" plans solve
all the headaches facing traditional corporate "defined benefit"
plans. Under 401(k) plans, employees, not company officials,
control their own investments (by choosing among a variety
of no-load mutual funds). Corporations no longer face unfunded
liabilities because there is no guaranteed projected benefit.
And workers and executives have complete mobility; they can
move that, 401k savings to a new employer or roll it over
into an IRA.
According
to recent Labor Department statistics, there are about nine
times more defined-contribution plans than defined-benefit
plans. Almost all of the major Fortune 500 companies have
switched to 401(k) plans or hybrid "cashbalance" plans. Companies
that still operate old plans include General Motors, Procter
& Gamble, Delta Airlines and The New York Times Company.
IBM, a company that once guaranteed lifetime employment, switched
to a "cashbalance" plan two years ago, giving its 100,000
employees an individual retirement account that they can take
with them in a lump sum if they leave the company before retirement
(long-service workers are still eligible for IBM's old defined-benefit
plan). But virtually all "new economy" companies, such as
Microsoft, AOL and Home Depot, offer 401(k) plans only.
Congress
could learn a great deal studying the changes corporate America
has made in pension fund reform. Converting Social Security
into personal investment accounts is a step in the right direction,
a policy change already achieved in Chile and other nations.
Unfortunately, government - unlike business - is not prone
to innovation. As Peter Drucker notes, "Government can gain
greater girth and more weight, but it cannot gain strength
or intelligence." Hopefully, Bush will prove me wrong.
UPDATES
Death
of Leader, Communist Party USA: Two months ago, Gus Hall,
90, longtime leader of the Communist Party USA died. In reading
Hall's life story in The New York Times, I was reminded
of my father's own story as an FBI agent in the 1940s, when
he was an undercover agent and spied on Gus Hall in Cleveland,
Ohio. In 1948, Hall was convicted of espionage under the Smith
Act and spent eight years in prison. My father, Leroy Skousen,
lived a fascinating life as a missionary, FBI agent, lawyer,
and anticommunist speaker. His life has been written up in
a book titled Thunder Broke the Heavens, available
from Skousen Publishing Co., P.O. Box 2488, Winter Park, Florida
32790, $20 postpaid (checks/cash only). See also the Book
Section.
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