How Important Are Private Pensions?

TitleHow Important Are Private Pensions?
Publication TypeReport
Year of Publication2002
AuthorsMunnell, AH, Sundén, A, Lidstone, E
Series TitleCenter for Retirement Research at Boston College Briefs
Document NumberIB#8
InstitutionCenter for Retirement Research at Boston College
CityBoston
Call Numberwp_2002/munnell.pdf
KeywordsEmployment and Labor Force, Income, Net Worth and Assets, Pensions
Abstract

Employer-provided pensions play an important role in assuring a comfortable retirement. In 1992, they accounted for about 20 percent of the total wealth of middle-income households aged 51-61, second only to Social Security. However, many workers still lack pension coverage. After increasing sharply in the post-World War II period, the percentage of the private sector workforce covered by an employer-sponsored pension plan at any given point in time has remained around 50 percent since the 1970s. This constancy obscures two major changes, however. First, pension coverage has increased for women and declined for men, primarily reflecting the increased earnings and labor force participation of women and a decline for men in union membership and employment in large manufacturing firms. Second, a major shift has occurred in the types of plans from defined benefit to defined contribution. Defined benefit plans generally provide retired workers with a set amount based on their salary history, while benefits under defined contribution plans depend on the accumulated amount in a worker’s account. The shift to defined contribution plans reflects employment trends as well as conversion of plans…

URLhttps://crr.bc.edu/briefs/how-important-are-private-pensions/
Endnote Keywords

Private Pensions/Retirement Incomes/Economic Status/Labor

Endnote ID

8554

Citation Key5498