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FAS 158 and Employee Benefit Plans

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Title: FAS 158 and Employee Benefit Plans


1
FAS 158 and Employee Benefit Plans
  • ACCT 70053
  • Spring 2008

2
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Companies offer two types of retirement benefit
    plans for their employees
  • Defined contribution plans the employer
    contributes some amount to a plan. The ultimate
    retirement benefit is uncertain and the employee
    bears the investment risk.
  • Defined benefit plans the employer promises to
    pay retirement benefits according to some benefit
    formula.

3
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Defined contribution plans do not present any
    significant accounting issues the annual cost
    of the plan is simply the amount of the required
    annual contribution
  • Defined benefit plans are more complex and are
    accounted for according to
  • FAS 87 Employers' Accounting for Pensions
  • FAS 88 Employers' Accounting for Settlements and
    Curtailments of Defined Benefit Pension Plans and
    for Termination BenefitsFAS 106 Employers'
    Accounting for Postretirement Benefits Other Than
    Pensions
  • FAS 158 Employers' Accounting for Defined
    Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans

4
Pensions A Quick Review
  • As employees earn retirement benefits, the
    employer incurs an obligation. This obligation
    can be measured several ways
  • Vested benefit obligation (VBO) is the present
    value of benefits that have been earned and
    vested.
  • Accumulated benefit obligation (ABO) is the
    present value of benefits earned based upon
    current salary levels.
  • Projected benefit obligation (PBO) is the present
    value of benefits earned based upon projected
    future salary levels

5
Pensions A Quick Review
  • The amount that an employer will have to pay for
    retirement benefits is determined by the benefit
    formula.
  • For example, BNSF describes its benefit formula
    as follows
  • The benefits under these pension plans are based
    on years of credited service and the highest
    consecutive sixty months of compensation for the
    last ten years of salaried employment with BNSF.

6
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Under most benefit formulas, the amount that will
    ultimately be paid to retirees is uncertain due
    to uncertainty about such factors as
  • Mortality
  • Employee turnover
  • Employee salary progression

7
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Due to the uncertainty, employers will use
    actuaries to estimate the expected amount of its
    obligation for retirement benefits
  • The retirement benefit obligation is the
    actuarially determined present value
  • When actual experience differs from the actuarial
    calculations, the result is actuarial
    gains/losses or pension gains/losses

8
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Most pension plans are required by Federal law to
    be funded to increase the likelihood that funds
    will be available to pay the retirement benefits.
  • BNSF describes its funding policy as follows
  • BNSFs funding policy is to contribute annually
    not less than the regulatory minimum and not more
    than the maximum amount deductible for income tax
    purposes with respect to the funded plan.

9
Pensions A Quick Review
  • The Federal government also established the
    Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC),
    funded by premiums paid by employers, to
    guarantee payment of benefits to retirees even if
    the employer is insolvent.

10
Pensions A Quick Review
  • The amounts funded by the employer are turned
    over to a trustee who will invest the funds until
    they are needed to pay retirement benefits
  • Therefore, the rate of return on plan assets will
    affect the amount the employer has to contribute
    to the fund, all else equal
  • Higher return on plan assets implies lower
    employer contributions

11
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Some definitions
  • Service cost the increase in the PBO due to the
    incremental retirement benefits earned in a
    period.
  • Interest cost the increase in the PBO due to
    the passage of time.
  • Prior service cost the increase (or decrease)
    in the PBO due to adoption or amendment of a
    defined benefit retirement plan.

12
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Some definitions
  • Funded status of the plan the excess of plan
    assets over PBO. If the fair value of plan assets
    exceeds the PBO, the plan is said to be
    overfunded. If the PBO exceeds the fair value of
    plan assets, the plan is underfunded. Under FAS
    158, the employer must recognize an asset or
    liability, as appropriate, for the funded status
    of the plan.

13
Underfunded pension plans
Companies in the SP 500 with the most
underfunded pension plans (amounts in millions,
2006 data)
14
Underfunded pension plans
There are 345 companies in the SP 500 index with
defined benefit pension plans. In the aggregate,
they were underfunded by more than 132 billion
in 2006.
15
Pensions A Quick Review
  • The annual cost of pension plans is determined as
    the sum of the following
  • Service cost
  • Interest cost
  • /- Amortization of losses/gains
  • Amortization of prior service cost
  • - Expected return on plan assets

16
Pensions A Quick Review
  • This calculation was designed to achieve income
    smoothing by
  • using the long-term expected return on plan
    assets rather than the actual return
  • ignoring pension gains/losses unless they become
    too big to ignore
  • recognizing the effects of plan amendments over a
    period of years

17
Pensions A Quick Review
  • Recognition of pension gains/losses is handled by
    a process known as corridor amortization unique
    to this topic.
  • If the cumulative amount of the net gain or loss
    exceeds 10 of PBO or plan assets, it is too big
    to ignore (outside the corridor) and must be
    amortized
  • Amortization only continues while the cumulative
    gain/loss is outside the corridor

18
Other Post-Employment Benefits
  • The accounting for other post-employment benefits
    (OPEBs), is covered by FAS 106 and is virtually
    identical to the accounting for pension plans.
  • These plans are not required by law to be funded
    and, therefore, many of them are unfunded.

19
Pensions BNSF 2007
Here is BNSFs calculation of annual pension cost
20
Pensions BNSF 2007
The following table describes the changes in
BNSFs Pension PBO
21
Pensions BNSF 2007
The following table describes the changes in
BNSFs pension plan assets
22
Pensions BNSF 2007
BNSFs pension plan is underfunded.
This is not an unusual situation and should not
be a cause for alarm among BNSF employees.
23
Pensions BNSF 2007
We can analyze how the pension plan affected
BNSFs financial statements
24
Pensions BNSF 2007
We can recreate the entry made by BNSF to record
pension cost
25
OPEBs BNSF 2007
  • Here is BNSFs calculation of annual OPEB cost

26
OPEBs BNSF 2007
  • The following table describes the changes in
    BNSFs OPEB PBO

27
OPEBs BNSF 2007
  • The following table describes the changes in
    BNSFs OPEB plan assets

28
OPEBs BNSF 2007
BNSFs OPEB plans are entirely unfunded
This is not uncommon since there is no federal
legislation requiring employers to fund post
retirement benefits other than pensions.
29
OPEBs BNSF 2007
We can analyze how the OPEB plans affected BNSFs
financial statements
30
OPEBs BNSF 2007
We can recreate the entry made by BNSF to record
OPEB cost
31
Effect of Adopting FAS 158
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