About this ebook
Healthy, well-performing pensions are possible.
It’s time for a modern, transformational approach to the future pension market: one in which there is an agreement about what will mitigate risk and keep our people, our organizations, and our global society safe and secure.
Pension Clarity shows you how to address insufficiencies and opportunities in pension planning for the future, and how to build effective, secure, and reliable pension plans that mitigate risk. You’ll learn how to design pensions for financial security, how to assess existing benefit plans to minimize costs and maximize value, how to create pension plans that are designed to benefit individuals, and how to engage employees in the pension process. You’ll also find out how to build responsiveness into your business environment by embracing new solutions that empower executives with up-to-date information and projections.
The fact is, pension management is not only about one business and one set of employees, but also about how we manage the steps we take towards the future. In an ever-evolving world, we can make a difference through strategic pension management. But actualizing the future we want to see depends wholly on our ability to lead.
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Pension Clarity - Catherine Miller
Copyright © 2021 by M. Catherine Miller
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior written consent of the publisher or a licence from The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). For a copyright licence, visit www.accesscopyright.ca or call toll free to 1-800-893-5777.
Cataloguing in publication information is available from Library and Archives Canada.
ISBN 978-1-77458-063-9 (paperback)
ISBN 978-1-77458-064-6 (ebook)
Page Two
pagetwo.com
Edited by Crissy Calhoun
Copyedited by Kendra Ward
Cover design by Jennifer Lum
Interior design by Setareh Ashrafologhalai
and Taysia Louie
Ebook by BrightWing Media
marrismiller.com
For my family
Contents
Introduction
1What’s Past Is Past
2Avoiding Risks, and the Three Most Important Questions
3Environment for Retirement
4The Psychology of Money
5How Actuaries Work, and How Leaders Ought to Work
6Leveraging the Law, for Worse or for Better?
7Unions, Change, and Collaboration
8Pensions and the Future of Work
9The Future Tech of Pensions
10 How to Support Pension Trustees and Your Organization
11 Parity Disparity, the Pension Issue of the Future
Conclusion: The Future Depends on Us
Notes
Acknowledgements
Index
Landmarks
Cover
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Body Matter
Introduction
Globalization has led to a shift in social, political, and economic factors, which include geo-political and financial boundaries, trans-governmental and local policies, and the nature of resource allocation and regulation, as well as aspects of business and social cultures. Under globalization, the way in which authority and risk control is applied in practice could be said to be changing, and this includes the pension sector.
At the same time, in the pension market, these shifts are not fundamental enough to help companies transform their pension promises quickly. Instead, in the last few years, we’ve seen many globally significant companies try to rapidly change the way that they manage their pensions in response to downturns in their industries, and we’ve seen firms accumulate significantly underfunded pensions. But these approaches have more often than not put these companies, and their shareholders, at risk. Bloomberg Markets reported that by the end of 2017, the largest S&P 500 companies’ pension funds were facing a $382 billion funding gap. As a case in point, General Electric (GE), although it was sitting on a pension surplus of $14.6 billion in 2001, was running a deficit of $7 billion a mere seven years later, in 2008. By the end of 2016, the GE deficit was $31 billion. One year later, by the end of 2017, the deficit was about $100 billion. 1
Something has to change. In the new global economy, businesses and organizations need renewed optimism for their pensions. And change is coming: we are seeing expansions in the pension industry and progressive, sustainable solutions that can lead to a different way of thinking about pensions and offer hope for those who want a better way of doing business, or at least a more realistic one.
To build a prosperous future for people, business, and society, leadership has to be at the centre of our decision-making process when creating and sustaining pension plans.
Pension obligations consist of payments owed to current and future retirees, this year and the year after, and the year after that, and far into the future—obligations that should have been advance-funded by paying into the relevant pension funds the amounts needed to cover those benefits, year by year, as those benefits were accrued. Every year that an organization fails to do this, or the pension industry fails to advise on such actions, is a year in which they place obligations on future generations of employees and of the company itself. This is a risk that no leader should be willing to take.
How do we define true leadership in this context of pension transformation? As fairness? Ownership? A will to manage?
We must be realistic about our expectations for pensions.
Leadership means that we need to imagine a different future for the pension market: one in which there is an agreement about what will mitigate risk and keep our people, our organizations, and our global society safe and secure. To this end, trusting that the market will correct itself is no longer enough, as clearly we have proved ourselves incapable of relying on market forces alone. If we are to be a sustainable global society, then we need to create, implement, and monitor regulations that will work in this environment. The current shifts are reflective of our first steps towards this goal, but more needs to be done to ensure a high level of risk management in our pension planning over the long term.
In this book, we’ll explore just how to address these insufficiencies and opportunities in pension planning for the future. We’ll discover just how much our risk management has to do with leadership, rather than with crunching numbers.
We will cover three essential pension leadership strategies in this book.
How to design your pensions for financial security. An employer’s financial obligation to pension promises is a long journey; the pension promises offered today need to be sustainable throughout the lives of individual members. At the same time, the regulatory landscape is shifting. This offers companies more flexibility, not necessarily more complexity or cost. For example, many companies’ existing benefit plan provisions were likely established decades ago: these need to be examined on a regular basis, especially when regulations change. Many expensive options that are adding cost to the plan, but little value, are likely still in your provisions. Employers need to look anew at their defined benefit promises, and focus on funding the most profitable benefits and offloading outdated provisions.
How to create pension plans designed for people, not the experts.Pensions are misunderstood, both by companies and by employees, partially because their benefits are not clearly communicated. Client letters and employee pension statements are math heavy and full of industry jargon, and most look more like a legal document than like something that people can use. With a simple and pleasant approach to communication, people will understand and appreciate their pension programs. They’ll engage in pension processes, and that means they’ll act like true stakeholders in the company. Evidence shows that plans designed for people increase overall accountability for pension performance and have a positive impact on employee performance.
How to build responsiveness into your business environment. Supporting pension discussions with data brought to the table by experts is important; but even more so, executives need to be able to understand pension benefits and their implications in the moment. Instead of raising questions and then waiting two weeks for a team of pension analysts to come back with answers, leaders can access up-to-date information, trends, and projections easily mined from new HR system technologies. Knowing how to view and use this data can help executives cut through the clutter and focus on strategies that deliver immediate results.
We can make pensions work. But the pervasive, ongoing uncertainty means that organizations need to get their actuaries and pension advisors working in a fundamentally different way. Modern pension design should work for individuals and society while building successful companies at the same time. Pensions are about people, not simply numbers. To build a long-term, sustainable pension plan that’s beyond the norm of traditional pension management, we need to think creatively, reflexively, and confidently, and we need to start with leadership.
1
What’s Past Is Past
Pension success is about resilient performance and parity in an age of uncertainty. But pension security, our way of working, and the capital market have become more intertwined than we’re willing to admit.
Why is this challenge important? In economic terms, financial security and stability create the peace of mind we feel when we aren’t worried about covering our expenses thanks to our reliable income amount. It also means that we have enough money saved to cover emergencies and future goals. Financial security means having enough money for the rest of our lives once we retire from work. Our pensions are meant to deliver that money.
In the past, however, loopholes in corporate and organizational policy frameworks for the pension market have made it difficult, if not impossible, to ensure adequate funds for employee retirement. That’s because a pension manager’s ability to use business acumen and good judgement affects whether a pension plan will provide after-work financial security for employees.
But before we get to how to provide that security, we need to look to the past to examine what legacies we’re dealing with when it comes to pension planning.
The human organization, namely, the ability of a company to recognize the value of its human assets through compensation practices, has been cited by writers in all fields of international business as a key differentiator between those companies that will be successful and those that will not in the next century. A firm’s way of managing its employees, including its pension benefits, can give it an advantage over its competitors and lead to positive organizational growth. But, as the examples below show, the reality is that growth has been and is still being leveraged in a way that does not sustain employee needs. No matter what pension plan is developed, attention to accounting practices in pension management will only increase in the wake of widespread challenges associated with the current global economic crisis and the ensuing media criticism of pensions, executive pay packages, and perquisites.
Let’s examine some of the challenges that organizations have faced in the last few years and explore why they have been so deeply problematic.
Sears Canada. The Sears Canada pension made headline news in late 2018 because of an underfunded pension plan that seemed to be, according to a lawsuit against Sears Canada’s largest shareholders, created to benefit investors rather than those who contributed to it in the first place. While $509 million in dividends was paid to Sears Canada shareholders in 2013, the pension fund was short $133 million by the time the company shuttered its doors in 2018, according to court documents. 1 In a deal structured in October 2019, pensioners stand to collect about $48 million, which, according to the lawsuit, is less than a tenth of what they should have received as a result of their investment in the company. Nonetheless, Sears did not do anything exceptional; in comparison to its industry, its actions were status quo and the company did not break funding rules. The more damaging challenge to employees, therefore, may be the pensioners’ argument that the 2013 dividend payment crippled the retailer’s ability to remain in business, because it made it difficult for the company to gain access to liquid capital when it was required.
General Motors. In his book While America Aged, Roger Lowenstein describes GM’s unsustainable pension promises—which shifted from a symbol of generosity and endearment of the employer to a horrendous debt that all but bankrupted the company—as a warning call. 2 GM built back its pension after a debilitating few years of poor management, with the company closing its Canadian plants, while employees were left confused about what they may have sacrificed in the short term. Active plan members and retirees are likely to be simultaneously relieved that the company recovered and reinvested $1.6 billion in its Canadian pension plans and deeply concerned about GM shutting down its operations. And yet, the company had the pension industry’s best and brightest advisors, including actuaries, investment experts, lawyers, and accountants who created a plan that was regulatorily sound. As with Sears