Pension Plans I. Overview – A pension plan is an agreement in which the employer provides employees with defined or estimated benefits in exchange for current or past services. Pension benefits are not paid currently; rather, they are a form of deferred compensation and are paid to retired employees, usually on a periodic basis. It is a guide for pension plan expense shown on the income statement and the presentation of the related pension liability or asset on the balance sheet of the sponsor company. It is not concerned with amounts to be funded (paid) to the pension trust during the year. It is concerned with amounts accrued and expensed by the employer company. It is based on accrual accounting. The accounting problems are caused by necessary use of estimates and assumptions, which affect the timing and measurement of pension costs (expense), gains and losses from investments of plan assets, and liabilities. In a DEFINED BENEFIT PLAN, the benefits that the employee receives at retirement are determined by formula. It is the sponsor company’s responsibility to ensure that contributions to the plan are sufficient to pay benefits as they come due. In a DEFINED CONTRIUTION PLAN, the contributions that the sponsor company makes to the plan are determined by formula. The employees’ retirement benefits are based on the amount of funds in the plan. Accounting for defined contribution plans is very simple, whereas accounting for defined benefit plans is complex. For a defined contribution plan, the sponsor company makes just one journal entry and, for defined benefit plans, the sponsor company makes multiple journal entries. It is very important to note that a pension plan and the sponsoring company are two separate legal entities. The pension plan accounting covered below is not concerned with the pension plan’s accounting. Rather, it is concerned with how the sponsor company accounts for the plan. a. Characteristics - a pension plan can be: i. Written or Implied – a plan’s provisions must be applied to both written plans and those plans whose existence may be implied from a well-defined, although perhaps unwritten, practice of paying postretirement benefits. ii. Contributory or Noncontributory – Employees are required to contribute to the plan if it contributory; only the employer contributes to the plan if it is noncontributory. iii. Funded or Non-funded 1. The employer makes cash contributions to the plan if it is funded. The amount funded does not have to equal the pension plan expense for the period. 2. For a non-funded plan, the employer makes entries on the books to reflect the pension plan liability. 3. Pension plans are accounted for on the accrual basis; any difference between the net periodic pension cost charged against income and the amount funded is recorded as accrued or prepaid pension cost. iv. Overfunded vs. Underfuned—applies to defined benefit plans only; an overfunded plan has assets in excess of liabilities, whereas an underfunded plan has liabilities in excess of its assets. b. Types of Plans i. Non-GAAP Methods 1. “Pay-as-you-go” – A cash basis method of expensing pension plan payments after someone has retired. Because it is a cash basis method, it is not GAAP. 2. Terminal Funding – A company pays an entire pension plan liability upon retirement of an employee, generally by purchasing an annuity-type insurance policy. Terminal funding is also a cash basis method and is not GAAP. ii. GAAP Methods 1. Defined Contribution Plan – This type of plan specifies the periodic amount of contribution to the plan and the way that the contributions should be allocated to employees. Factors to consider when calculating contributions to the plan include the employee’s length of service and compensation amounts. 2. Defined Benefit Plan – This type of plan defines the benefits to be paid to employees at retirement. Contributions are computed using actuarial estimates of future benefit payments based on factors such as the employee’s compensation levels at or near retirement and the number of years of employee service. c. Definitions i. Prior Service Cost – The cost of retroactive benefits granted, past service cost at initiation of a new plan, or subsequent plan amendment reflecting new or increased benefits. Prior service cost should be amortized over future periods benefited. ii. Service Cost – The present value of benefits attributed by the pension benefit formula to current services rendered by employees (and is provided by the actuary). The service cost component is a portion of the projected benefit obligation and is unaffected by the funded status of the plan. iii. Interest Cost – The increase in projected benefit obligation (PBO) due to passage of time. Measuring the PBO as a present value requires accrual of an interest cost on the projected benefit obligation, at rates equal to the assumed discount rates. iv. Actual Return on Plan Assets – Determined based on the fair value of plan assets at the beginning and ending of the period, adjusted for contributions and benefit payments (a squeeze). v. Prepaid Pension Cost – An asset is the cumulative employer contributions in excess of cumulative accrued net pension cost. vi. Accrued Pension Liability – The unfunded accrued pension cost is the cumulative accrued net pension cost in excess of cumulative employer contributions. vii. Projected Benefit Obligation (PBO) – The actuarial present value of all benefits attributed by the plan’s benefit formula to employee service rendered prior to that date. PBO may use an assumption as to future compensation levels. viii. Accumulated Benefit Obligation (ABO) – The actuarial present value of benefits attributed by a formula bas on current and past compensation levels. An ix. x. xi. xii. ABO differs from a PBO in that the ABO includes no assumption about future compensation levels (use current salaries). Vested Benefits – Pension plan benefits that already belong (vest) to employees who have earned their benefits by reason of having reached retirement age and/or who otherwise meet unique pension plan requirements. The benefits are vested whether or not that person has actually retired, and they are not contingent on remaining in the service of the employer. Generally, pension plan documents require money to be left in the plan until retirement. Actuarial Gains and Losses—Adjustments to the PBO that arise when the actuary changes one or more of the assumptions used to calculate the PBO. Gains decrease the PBO; losses increase the PBO. Benefit Payments—Payments to the participant after retirement. The payment of benefits reduces the PBO and reduces Plan Assets. Plan Assets—Assets, generally stock, bonds, etc., set aside to provide for pension benefits. They are reported at FV. Plan assets increase each period by contributions to the pension plan (funding) and by the return on assets. Plan assets decrease each period by the amount of benefits paid to retired employees. II. Income Statement Accounting for the Employer’s Net Periodic Pension Cost a. Income Statement (Expense) Formula Current Service Cost Interest Cost (Actual Return) Amortization of Prior Service Cost (Gains) Losses Amortization of Existing Net Obligation or Net Asset Net Pension Expense b. Journal Entries i. To record net pension expense for period Net pension expense Current pension liability ii. To record payment of cash to pension plan trustee Current pension liability Cash c. Components of “Net Periodic Pension Expense” i. Current Service Cost – Increase in the PBO (Projected Benefit Obligation) resulting from employee services this period. The pension benefit formula is applied to compute a present value. ii. Interest Cost – The increase in the projected benefit obligation during the current period that is (PBO) due to the passage of time. 1. PBO X Settlement Rate = Interest Cost iii. (Return on Plan Assets) – Accounting standards allow companies to offset pension expense by either the actual return on plan assets or the expected return on plan assets 1. Actual Return on Plan Assets: Based upon fair value of plan assets at the beginning and end of the period, adjusted for contributions and benefit payments. Beginning fair value of plan assets Plus Contributions Minus Benefit Payments = Estimated Fair Value of Plan Assets Minus Actual fair value of plan assets = Actual return on plan assets 2. Expected Return on Plan Assets: Companies use the expected return on plan assets in the computation of pension expense in order to smooth earnings. The expected return on plan assets is calculated as follows: Beginning FV of plan assets X expected rate of return on plan assets = expected return on plan assets. When companies use the expected return on plan assets to calculate pension expense, the difference between actual and expected return must be recognized in other comprehensive income each period and then amortized to pension expense over time with any actuarial gains or losses. iv. Amortization of Unrecognized Prior Service Cost – In the period that a pension plan is initiated or amended, the resulting prior service cost increases the PBO and is recorded as unrecognized prior service cost in other comprehensive income. The unrecognized prior service cost in accumulated other comprehensive income is amortized to pension expense over the plan participant’s remaining years of service. The amortization is calculated using the unrecognized prior service cost balance at the beginning of the period. v. (Gains) or Losses (Unrecognized) – Gains and losses arise from two sources: 1. The difference between the expected and actual return on plan assets when the expected return on plan assets is used to calculate pension expense, and 2. Changes in actuarial assumptions. 3. Accounting—two choices a. Recognize gains and losses on the income statement in the period incurred, OR b. Recognize the gains and losses in other comprehensive income in the period incurred and then amortize the unrecognized gains and losses to pension expense over time using the corridor approach— an entity’s net unrecognized gain or loss is amortized over the employees’ average remaining service period, if as of the beginning of the year, this amount exceeds 10% of the greater of the beginning of the year balances of: i. Market related value of plan assets = Assets ii. Projected benefit obligation = Liabilities vi. Amortization of Existing Net Obligation or Net Asset at Implementation 1. Projected Benefit Obligation Minus Fair market value plan assets = Initial unfunded obligation / 15 years or average employee job life (greater) = minimum amortization III. Balance Sheet Accounting for Pension Plans a. Pension Plan Contributions—A company’s contribution to its defined benefit pension plan(s) increases the pension plan asset (overfunded pension plans) or decreases the pension plan liability (underfunded pension plans). Journal Entry: Pension benefit asset/liability xxx Cash xxx b. Funded Status—Companies must report the funded status of their pension plans on the B/S as an asset or liability or both. The funded status of a pension plan is calculated using the following formula: FV of plan assets – PBO = Funded Status. If a company has multiple defined benefit pension plans, the funded status of each plan is calculated separately. i. Pension Plan Asset (noncurrent): A positive funded status indicates that the pension is overfunded. All overfunded pension plans are aggregated and reported in total as a noncurrent asset. ii. Pension Plan Liability (current, noncurrent, or both): A negative funded status indicates that the pension is underfunded. All underfunded pension plans are aggregated and reported as a current liability, noncurrent liability, or both. c. Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income: Changes in the funded status of a pension plan due to prior service cost and pension gains and losses must be reported in other comprehensive income in the period incurred, unless the company chooses to recognize the pension gains and losses immediately on the income statement. Prior service cost and pension gains and losses remain in accumulated other comprehensive income until amortized to net periodic pension cost. Any remaining unrecognized transition obligation or asset is also reported in accumulated other comprehensive income, net of tax, until amortized to the net periodic pension cost. i. Prior Service Cost and Pension Loss 1. Recognition in Period Incurred: Prior service cost and pension losses decrease the funded status of the pension plan and are recorded with the following journal entry in the period incurred: Other Comprehensive Income xxx Pension benefit asset/liability xxx A deferred tax asset must also be recognized because prior service cost and pension losses increase the benefits that will be paid to retired employees in the future. When these benefits are paid, the company will take a tax deduction for the benefit payments, decreasing future taxes. The related deferred tax benefit must be recognized in OCI as an offset to the unrecognized prior service cost or pension loss. All elements of AOCI are reported net of tax. Deferred tax asset xxx Deferred tax benefit—OCI xxx 2. Amortization to Pension Expense—When prior service cost, net losses, and any remaining transition obligation are amortized, they are reclassified out of accumulated other comprehensive income and recognized as a component of pension expense. Net periodic pension cost xxx Other comprehensive income xxx The related deferred tax benefit must also be removed from accumulated other comprehensive income and recorded on the income statement. Deferred tax benefit—OCI xxx Deferred tax benefit—I/S xxx ii. Pension Gains 1. Recognition in Period Incurred—Pension gains increase the funded status of the pension plan and are recorded with the following entry in the period incurred? Pension benefit asset/liability xxx Other comprehensive income xxx A deferred tax liability must also be recognized because pension gains decrease the benefits that will be paid to retired employees in the future and thereby decrease the tax deduction for the benefit payments, increasing future taxes. The related deferred tax expense must be recognized in OCI as an offset to unrecognized pension gain. All elements of AOCI are reported net of tax. Deferred tax expense—OCI Deferred tax liability 2. xxx xxx Amortization to Pension Expense—When pension gains and any remaining net transition assets are recognized in net periodic pension cost through the amortization process, the following reclassification adjustment is recorded. Other comprehensive income Net periodic pension cost xxx xxx The related deferred tax expense must also be removed from accumulated other comprehensive income and recorded on the income statement. Deferred tax expense—I/S xxx Deferred tax expense—OCI xxx IV. Pension Settlement and Curtailment and Termination Benefits a. Settlements – Settlements occur when the pension plan assets increase in value to the point that sale of the pension plan assets allows a company to purchase annuity contracts to satisfy pension obligations. Remaining funds from the sale of assets may, with restrictions, be used by the corporation. b. Curtailment – Curtailments are events that reduce the expected remaining years of service for present employees or eliminate accrual of defined benefits for future services of a significant number of employees. c. Termination – Termination benefits arise when employees are paid to terminate their rights to future pension payments. i. Formula Lump sum payments Plus P.V. Termination Benefit = Special Term Benefit ii. Journal Entry Special term benefit expense Special term benefit liability