Title: Pensions
1Pensions Other Post Employment Benefits after
SFAS No. 158
- Includes certain slides provided by authors of
Skousen, Stice Stice and Kieso, Weygandt
Warfield Intermediate Accounting textbooks, as
modified and adapted by Teresa Gordon
2Types of plans
- Contributory Plan
- Non-Contributory Plan
- Defined Contribution Plan
- Defined Benefit Plan
3Defined contribution plans
- A plan that provides benefits based solely on
what has been contributed and the earnings
thereon lt 401(k) gt - Amounts to be funded are determined by the plan
- No promise for specific future benefits.
- Independent third party holds assets
- Risk borne by employee
- Accounting relatively straightforward
4Defined benefit plans
- A pension plan that determines the amount of
benefit to be provided - Contributions based on estimated amounts needed
to meet expected payments - Form versus substance of trust
- Risk borne by employer
- Accounting by employer is complicated
5Defined Benefit Pension Plan
Employer
Current Employees
6Pension Approaches
- Before FASB 87 88
- pay as you go or noncapitalization
- FASB 87 88
- Capitalization approach
- Full obligation reported only in notes
- FASB 158
- Pension post-retirement benefit cost is same as
FASB 87 - Full obligation is now reported on balance sheet
- Additional items now on statement of
comprehensive income
7Capitalization approach to pensions
- Employer has full liability for benefits related
to service already rendered by employee - Expense is recognized as employees work (service
cost) and this increases the liability - Liability balance increases every year since
present value of future benefits is larger (less
time remains to cash outflow) - Liability is reduced through payments to retirees
- Assets of the plan are considered pledged,
collateral against a liability - Liability less designated assets reported on
balance sheet (net presentation)
8Measures of Pension Liability
Benefits for vested and nonvested employees at
future salaries
Benefits for vested and non- vested employees at
current salaries
Accumulated Benefit Obligation
Projected Benefit Obligation
Benefits for vested employees at current salaries
Vested Benefit Obligation
(GAAP)
9Interest/return rates
- Discount rate
- Rates on high-quality fixed-income investments
with maturities consistent with expected payments
to retirees - Generally equivalent to a portfolio of
zero-coupon bonds with appropriate maturities - Expected rate of return
- Based on long-term rate of return anticipated
given investment of plan assets
10What happens when
- Interest rates increase?
- Interest rates decrease?
11A working paper for pensions
12Accounts on Employers Books
- Net Periodic Pension Cost (Expense)
- Amount recognized by the employer on the income
statement - Pension expense includes six basic elements (more
later) - Other comprehensive income
- Up to three amounts reported for changes in
balance of AOCI amounts (see next slide)
13Working Paper Pension Expense
14A working paper for pensions
15Accounts on Employers Books
- On balance sheet Net funded position
- When PBO gt Plan Assets, reported as noncurrent
liability (with current liability if there are
inadequate plan assets to cover current payments
to retirees) - When Plan Assets gt PBO, reported as noncurrent
asset
16A working paper for pensions
17Accounts on Employers Books
- Accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI)
- Account appears as part of owners equity section
of balance sheet - Three pension related balances
- Transition gain or loss
- Prior service cost
- Actuarial gains or losses
18A working paper for pensions
19Self-checking features
Funded status must equal PBO Plan Assets
Each blue row must add across to ZERO
Balance forwards
20Net Periodic Pension Cost
- Net periodic pension cost (the expense) consists
of six basic elements - Service cost
- Interest cost
- Expected return on plan assets
- Amortization (if any) of
- Transition gain or loss
- Prior service cost
- Unrecognized gain or loss
21Pension Definitions
- Prior Service Cost (PSC)
- Cost of benefits granted for service rendered
prior to the inception of the plan - Increases PBO at date of amendment but cost is
amortized to expense over future years - Reduces funded status since PBO is higher
- Recognized as charge to OCI at date of plan
amendment - Amortization method recommended
- Years of service method
- Straight-line or other methods that amortize PSC
faster are also acceptable
22Actuarial Gains and Losses
- Actuarial assumptions are subject to inaccuracies
as time goes by and circumstances change - There is a materiality provision for determining
when gains and losses are sufficiently large to
require amortization (charge to expense) - 10 Corridor Rule
23Kieso, Weygandt Warfield 11th ed. Illustration
20-14, page 1034
2410 Corridor Amortization
- Amortization is required only on the portion of
unrecognized net gain or loss that exceeds 10 of
the greater of - PBO at beginning ofyear, or
- market-related value of plan assets at the
beginning of the year.
25Settlements Curtailments
- Additional FASB standards govern major changes in
pension plans - Settlements
- No further obligations to some or all employees
- Curtailments
- Results in significant reduction in expected
years, or - No further accrual of benefits
- Handling will require further research (primarily
FASB 88)
26Pension Disclosures FAS 132(R)
- Amount and types of assets held
- Assumptions related to discount rate, rate of
increase in compensation, expected return on plan
assets - Alternative amortization policies
- Past practice or history of regular benefit
increases
27Pension Disclosures FAS 132(R)
- The details for net periodic pension cost
- the service cost component.
- the interest cost component.
- the expected return on plan assets FAS 132
- the amortization of PSC, transition amount and
unrecognized gain/loss (separately) - Gain or loss from settlement or curtailment of
plan
28Pension DisclosuresReconciliations
- The fair value of plan assets (changes between
BOY and EOY) - PBO Obligation (changes between BOY and EOY)
Easily obtained from our work paper!
EoY end of yearBoY beginning of year
29Pension Disclosures
- Employers with multiple plans
- Information can be combined but the computations
are made for each individual plan - Net position for over-funded plans would be
reported in noncurrent assets - Net position for under-funded plans would be
reported in liabilities - Part may be reported as a current liability
- See next slide
30Current portion of liability
- The current portion (determined on a plan-by-plan
basis) is the amount by which the actuarial
present value of benefits in PBO that are payable
in the next 12 months exceeds the fair value of
plan assets - As always, the operating cycle might be longer
than 12 months in which case wed use the
operating cycle
31Other Postretirement Benefits
- FASB 106 Appendix Material in KWW text
- Also changed by FASB No. 158
32Other Post-retirement Benefits
- The accounting is similar to pension accounting
EXCEPT that - the terminology is slightly different
- EPBO
- APBO
33Kieso, Weygandt Warfield 11th ed. Illustration
20A-3, page 1056
34APBO vs EPBO
- Prior to the date on which an employee attains
full eligibility for the benefits that employee
is expected to earn - APBO lt EPBO
- On and after the full eligibility date,
- APBO EPBO
- In other words
- EPBO gt APBO until the employee has earned the
right to full benefits - EPBO APBO after the employee has worked long
enough to earn full eligibility
35Kieso, Weygandt Warfield 11th ed. Illustration
20A-2, page 1056
- Cost attributed to period from hire to
eligibility (vesting)
36Postretirement Benefit Worksheet
- Would be the same as a pension worksheet with
modified labels at the top - Pension Expense becomes Postretirement Benefit
Expense. - PBO becomes APBO.
37Working paper for FAS106
38Net periodic postretirement benefit cost.
- The expense basically includes the same elements
as pension cost - Service cost -- the actuarial present value of
benefits attributed to services rendered by
employees during the period. - Interest cost -- the interest on the beginning
balance of the accumulated postretirement benefit
obligation - Less expected return on plan assets.
- Amortizations (transition, prior service cost and
unrecognized gain or loss)
39Comparing FASB 87 106