ChatterBank12 mins ago
What Does The Term, 'pension Deficit', Actually Mean?
17 Answers
I think it rarely comes about because of fraud, though it may have done in the case of Robert Maxwell.
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No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sandy....It means that the assets in a pension schemes are insufficient to meet the pensions that will need to be paid out to members during the next few years.
My own BT pension fund is currently in deficit to the eye-watering amount of £7bn !
This means that BT will have to continue to pour huge sums of money into its pension fund for many years ahead.
My own BT pension fund is currently in deficit to the eye-watering amount of £7bn !
This means that BT will have to continue to pour huge sums of money into its pension fund for many years ahead.
The problem is that most final salary pension fund closed many years ago, so there are not enough contributors to meet the those already, and soon to be retired. Pension funds are also highly dependent on the stockmarket and dividend income. This makes dividends a 2 edged sword, Pension fund need to benefit from them and it leaves Companies with less to fund their own schemes. A lot have moved into safer investments with lower returns.
Many years ago, whilst still working I attended a breakfast meeting (yuk) where the speaker was an Economist. One question was how are pension funds valued. The reply, how many people are their being paid pensions, how many future pensioners will they be, how many will carry on to retirement age contributing and how many will leave the Company. Then work out how long they are all going to live. Stick your finger in the air and see which way the winds blowing. At least he raised a laugh.
Coincidentally I have just closed an email from my own pension provider with the results of the Compulsory Triannual valuation (end of 2014 as it takes so long) It is valued at 102% so at the moment I am hopefully in a fairly secure position.
Many years ago, whilst still working I attended a breakfast meeting (yuk) where the speaker was an Economist. One question was how are pension funds valued. The reply, how many people are their being paid pensions, how many future pensioners will they be, how many will carry on to retirement age contributing and how many will leave the Company. Then work out how long they are all going to live. Stick your finger in the air and see which way the winds blowing. At least he raised a laugh.
Coincidentally I have just closed an email from my own pension provider with the results of the Compulsory Triannual valuation (end of 2014 as it takes so long) It is valued at 102% so at the moment I am hopefully in a fairly secure position.
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// A pension fund deficit is simply when potential liabilities are greater than the assets. // db
but of course it isnt as simple as that
I am sure we have had this before you know ....
anyway Ubases answer should be best....
and yes I am reasonably certain she gave the same answer last time
and it all depends on how you define liability ... and luckily for us the Man from Brussels has had a go and he defines it as
the amount of money you would have to pay on the day of valuation out if everyone took their pension on that day
what ... even the 25 y olds ? .... yup
so as you can see - it is a bit of social construct = the phrase means what you want it to mean and that day will never occur
The NHS scheme is pay-as-you-go and so there is no pension fund ( look I am SURE we have had this before ) and the pensions are paid fully out of current year contributions and so there are no assets for to offsete the calculated ( see above ) liabilities of $163 bn
This is nt a mistake the sustem was designed like this
Pension hlidays are a a thing of the past
yes the chancellor killed all final salary schemes in 1997 when he did his pension tax grab
and no fraud is NOT a cause of pension deficit
and yes Maxwell DID loot his pension fund
he instructed the mirror pension trustees who should have said no but said yes instead to buy Mirror shares to support the share price
( obvious fraud )
I think there were THREE pension acts after that as our wonderful govt couldnt get the regulation right
but of course it isnt as simple as that
I am sure we have had this before you know ....
anyway Ubases answer should be best....
and yes I am reasonably certain she gave the same answer last time
and it all depends on how you define liability ... and luckily for us the Man from Brussels has had a go and he defines it as
the amount of money you would have to pay on the day of valuation out if everyone took their pension on that day
what ... even the 25 y olds ? .... yup
so as you can see - it is a bit of social construct = the phrase means what you want it to mean and that day will never occur
The NHS scheme is pay-as-you-go and so there is no pension fund ( look I am SURE we have had this before ) and the pensions are paid fully out of current year contributions and so there are no assets for to offsete the calculated ( see above ) liabilities of $163 bn
This is nt a mistake the sustem was designed like this
Pension hlidays are a a thing of the past
yes the chancellor killed all final salary schemes in 1997 when he did his pension tax grab
and no fraud is NOT a cause of pension deficit
and yes Maxwell DID loot his pension fund
he instructed the mirror pension trustees who should have said no but said yes instead to buy Mirror shares to support the share price
( obvious fraud )
I think there were THREE pension acts after that as our wonderful govt couldnt get the regulation right
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