📈Financial Accounting II Unit 8 – Pensions & Postretirement Benefits
Pensions and postretirement benefits are crucial components of employee compensation packages. These benefits provide financial security for workers after retirement, with employers often bearing significant financial obligations to fund future payments.
Accounting for pensions involves complex calculations and estimates. Key concepts include defined benefit vs. contribution plans, measuring pension obligations, recognizing expenses, and reporting funded status on financial statements. Understanding these principles is essential for accurate financial reporting and analysis.
Pensions provide employees with retirement income based on factors such as years of service and compensation levels
Postretirement benefits include health care, life insurance, and other benefits provided to retired employees
Defined benefit plans specify the benefits an employee will receive upon retirement, with the employer bearing the investment risk
Defined contribution plans specify the contributions made by the employer, with the employee bearing the investment risk (401(k) plans)
Pension obligations represent the present value of future benefits earned by employees
Actuarial assumptions (discount rates, life expectancy) are used to calculate pension obligations
Pension expenses include service cost, interest cost, and amortization of prior service cost and actuarial gains/losses
Plan assets are investments held by the pension fund to meet future benefit payments
Funded status is the difference between plan assets and pension obligations, reported on the balance sheet
Types of Pension Plans
Defined benefit plans provide a specified benefit to employees upon retirement, based on factors such as years of service and compensation levels
Employer bears the investment risk and must fund any shortfall in plan assets
Benefits are typically paid as an annuity over the employee's retirement years
Defined contribution plans specify the contributions made by the employer to individual employee accounts (401(k), 403(b))
Employee bears the investment risk and receives the balance in their account upon retirement
Employer's obligation is limited to making the specified contributions
Cash balance plans are a hybrid between defined benefit and defined contribution plans
Employer credits a specified percentage of an employee's compensation to a hypothetical account each year
Account balance grows based on a guaranteed rate of return, providing a predictable benefit to employees
Accounting for Defined Benefit Plans
Pension obligations are measured using the projected unit credit method, which attributes benefits to periods of employee service
Service cost represents the present value of benefits earned by employees during the current period
Interest cost is the increase in the pension obligation due to the passage of time, calculated using the discount rate
Actuarial gains and losses result from changes in actuarial assumptions or differences between actual and expected experience
Gains and losses are amortized over the average remaining service period of active employees
Prior service cost arises when a plan is initiated or amended, and is amortized over the remaining service period of affected employees
Plan assets are measured at fair value, with actual returns recognized in the period they occur
Pension Obligations and Expenses
Projected benefit obligation (PBO) is the present value of future benefits attributed to employee service rendered to date, considering future salary increases
Accumulated benefit obligation (ABO) is the present value of benefits earned to date, based on current salaries
Pension expense includes the following components:
Service cost: Present value of benefits earned during the current period
Interest cost: Increase in PBO due to passage of time
Expected return on plan assets: Offset to pension expense based on expected long-term rate of return
Amortization of prior service cost: Portion of cost from plan initiation or amendment recognized in current period
Amortization of actuarial gains/losses: Portion of gains/losses outside the "corridor" recognized in current period
Net periodic pension cost is the sum of the above components, recognized as an expense in the income statement
Plan Assets and Funding
Plan assets are investments held by the pension fund to meet future benefit obligations
Assets may include stocks, bonds, real estate, and other investments
Actual returns on plan assets are recognized in the period they occur
Funded status is the difference between plan assets and the projected benefit obligation
Overfunded plans have assets exceeding the PBO, resulting in a net pension asset on the balance sheet
Underfunded plans have a PBO exceeding assets, resulting in a net pension liability on the balance sheet
Employers may make contributions to pension plans to maintain adequate funding levels
Minimum contributions are required by law to avoid penalties
Employers may make additional discretionary contributions to improve funded status or reduce future pension expense
Actuarial Assumptions and Calculations
Discount rate is used to calculate the present value of future benefit payments
Typically based on high-quality corporate bond yields with maturities matching the timing of expected benefit payments
Expected long-term rate of return on plan assets is used to calculate the expected return component of pension expense
Based on the composition of plan assets and long-term capital market assumptions
Mortality rates and life expectancy assumptions affect the projected benefit payments
Longevity improvements may increase pension obligations over time
Salary increase assumptions are used to project future benefit levels for plans based on final or average pay
Actuarial cost methods, such as the projected unit credit method, attribute benefits to periods of employee service
Different methods may result in different patterns of cost recognition over time
Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions
Other postretirement benefits (OPEBs) include health care, life insurance, and other benefits provided to retired employees
Accounting for OPEBs is similar to pensions, with obligations measured using actuarial assumptions and attributed to periods of service
Key differences include the impact of health care cost trends and the absence of plan assets in most cases
Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation (APBO) represents the present value of future benefits attributed to service rendered to date
Net periodic postretirement benefit cost includes service cost, interest cost, and amortization of prior service cost and actuarial gains/losses
Employers may fund OPEBs through contributions to a trust or on a pay-as-you-go basis
Funded status is reported on the balance sheet as the difference between the APBO and any plan assets
Financial Statement Reporting and Disclosures
Balance sheet reports the funded status of pension and OPEB plans as a net asset or liability
Overfunded plans result in a net asset, while underfunded plans result in a net liability
Income statement reports the net periodic pension cost and net periodic postretirement benefit cost as components of operating expenses
Comprehensive income reports actuarial gains and losses, prior service costs, and other changes in plan assets and obligations not yet recognized in net periodic cost
Footnote disclosures provide detailed information about pension and OPEB plans, including:
Description of the plans and benefits provided
Actuarial assumptions used in measuring obligations and costs
Changes in benefit obligations, plan assets, and funded status during the period
Components of net periodic cost and expected future benefit payments
Sensitivity of obligations and costs to changes in key assumptions (discount rate, health care cost trends)