George Will must be losing his mind to say this:
"Horton has done taxpayers a favor by deciding not to turn American's non-pilot pensions over to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., the deeply underfunded federal agency that would pay only a portion of what employees were expecting. American will pay benefits already accrued but henceforth employees will have defined contribution rather than defined benefit plans."
Here is reality:
PBGC puts up its case against AMR's plan to dump its pensions
By Terry Maxon/Reporter
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6:00 AM on Fri., Feb. 17, 2012 | Permalink
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., which is waging a public campaign to keep AMR from dumping its four pension plans, has put up a webpage stating its case.
"American Airlines has announced it wants to end the pension plans of its 130,000 workers and retirees. The company will ask the bankruptcy court to transfer its pension obligations to PBGC," the agency says on its page.
"Pensions are promises made to working Americans who count on them for a secure retirement. Those promises should not be broken lightly. PBGC will make sure the AMR pensions end only as a last resort: if doing so is necessary for the airline to restructure itself successfully after considering the possible alternatives," it continued.
"Unfortunately, some of the claims that have been made about these issues aren't true," PBGC said.
If you read the PBGC paper, it doesn't exactly refute American's claims, but gives a different view of the situation.
For example,
American says that more than 90 percent of the 130,000 participants in its four pension plans would not see their pensions reduced if the PBGC took them over. PBGC says "that just isn't true" for the 13,000 who would see their pensions reduced.
In other words, American is saying that most people wouldn't see their pensions reduced if the PBGC took them over. PBGC is countering that the action would hurt the participants whose pensions would be reduced.