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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Pension insurer running record deficit

Shortfall triples to $33.5 billion in six months

Deb Riechmann Associated Press

WASHINGTON – In an ominous setback, the government agency that insures the pensions of 44 million Americans has amassed a record $33.5 billion deficit – triple what it was just six months ago.

The bleak financial snapshot, in a report obtained by the Associated Press, raises new fears that a federal bailout eventually will be needed for the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. The beleaguered agency is being saddled with the underfunded pension plans of companies going bankrupt in the worst economic slump since the Great Depression.

A rare midyear financial update requested by Congress shows the $11.1 billion deficit the agency posted at the end of its fiscal year on Sept. 30 has swelled by $22.5 billion to its highest level in the agency’s 35-year history.

The agency’s acting director says, however, that the more than 640,000 people who currently receive PBGC checks need not worry about the deficit.

“We have plenty of money to make those monthly payments promised to them for the near future,” Vince Snowbarger said Tuesday. “We’re comfortable that for the time being we’ve got a way to make sure those payments are going to be there. Long term there is going to have to be some resolution of that deficit. I think at some point in time it’s going to require congressional attention.”

The agency does not insure 401(k) plans, but its fate is important not only to the workers covered by more than 29,000 employer-sponsored benefit pension plans but to all taxpayers who could be asked to foot the bill on a bailout if the agency ever becomes insolvent.

Its balance sheet has taken heavy hits in recent years. Nine of the 10 largest pension plan terminations in its history, including United Airlines, Bethlehem Steel and Kaiser Aluminum, have occurred since 2001. On Tuesday, the PBGC announced that it has assumed responsibility for two pension plans covering about 4,300 workers and retirees of Lenox Group Inc., a bankrupt maker of tableware, giftware and collectibles based in Eden Prairie, Minn.

Created by Congress in 1974, the agency quietly operates in a brick office building a few blocks from the White House. When a company’s pension plan is terminated, the agency takes over and pays benefits to the retired workers covered by the plan – although retirees don’t always get 100 percent of what their employer promised. The maximum guaranteed amount currently is $54,000 a year for a person retiring at age 65.