FoxHunter said:
Maximum Monthly Guarantee from PBGC Web Site
I think you will find that if you wait to age 65 to collect your pension you will get $44,386. Since the FAA mandated retirement age is age 60 I'm not sure that is even an option, or wise since you would be getting no income for at least two years and only the reduced Social Security for the next three. In any case if you read the chart in the link you will find that at age 60 the max the PBGC will pay is $28,851.12 per year in 2004.
I'm not sure that the taxpayer will have to pay anything toward pilot pensions since although they are underfunded for the promised retirements of $100,000+ there may be no underfunding when these payments are reduced by 70-80%.
Actually, it looks like the younger guys will lose the most. The senior and middle retirees will probably lose very little if they were due to get $100,000 on their pensions. UAL already had $2.8B and the PBGC will just fund the shortfall.
The government calculates that United has promised its pilots pensions worth $5.7 billion but that the pension plan has just $2.8 billion in assets. United has put $55 million into the plan since 1996.
Of the $2.9 billion shortfall, the pension agency said it would shoulder $1.4 billion by taking over some of the benefits for the 14,000 participating pilots.
The remaining $1.5 billion will be borne by the pilots as reductions in their benefits. The government's pension insurance is limited, and many pilots have earned more than the maximum coverage.
The pilots will bear the losses differently depending on their age, years of service and other factors. The oldest, who have either retired or been eligible to retire for at least three years, may be able to get more coverage than the government's basic guarantees. This is because of rules that shift some of a defunct pension plan's assets toward retirement-age participants when the government takes over a plan. Just how much of a boon this will be for United's retirees is difficult to predict, though, because the amount of additional coverage depends on the makeup of an individual plan and its solvency.
United's younger, active pilots stand to lose a larger portion of their anticipated benefits. But United has agreed with the pilots' union to compensate them for their losses by granting them $550 million in notes, convertible to new stock after reorganization, and making larger contributions to a separate retirement plan that is not structured as a traditional, defined-benefit pension plan.
Those terms were reached about two weeks ago, as part of the same agreement in which the airline and union intended to postpone termination of the pension plan until May. The government's legal complaint asked only that the court terminate the pilots' plan immediately and did not address any of the agreement's other terms. But a spokesman for the pension agency said the government planned to file a separate motion in bankruptcy court by today opposing the pledges of convertible notes and enriched retirement plan to the active pilots. The agency does not want to set a precedent that would allow companies to dump their current pension obligations on the government and then set up new plans for their workers.
Delaying the pension termination until May would have been worth tens of millions of dollars to United's active pilots. They would have been able to keep building up their benefits during that time, and the ceiling on insurance coverage would have been higher because the pension agency raises its limits every year to account for inflation.
In addition, the pilots would have achieved the maximum insurance coverage for their most recent pension increase, which was granted as of April 2000. Whenever a company increases the terms of a pension plan, the government phases in its corresponding insurance coverage over five years to keep troubled companies from promising big increases, then defaulting and leaving the government to pick up the tab. By waiting to terminate the plan until May, United and the pilots hoped to have completed the phase-in period.
Meanwhile, however, United would be paying more than $100 million in benefits to existing retirees, probably without replenishing the money. That would lower the funded level of the plan, to the detriment of pilots who had reached retirement age and whose ability to exceed the insurance limits depends on the amount in the plan at termination.
Bradley D. Belt, the executive director of the pension agency, said the agency was operating with a record deficit and "must be vigilant in guarding against unnecessary losses."
"I hope the plight of the participants in airline pension plans puts an exclamation point on the need for Congress to strengthen the funding rules for defined benefit pension plans," Mr. Belt added.
The Bush administration is expected to issue a set of proposals for shoring up the pension system early in the new year.