Pension

A pension provides regular income payments that you would receive for the rest of your life when you stop working--typically when people retire. A pension plan is a large pool of savings grows over time through contributions from workers or plan participants and their employer or plan sponsor. The plan assets are managed by professional investment managers, and most of the risks (such as investment risk) associated with managing plan assets will be assumed by the plan sponsor rather than plan participants. Particulars will vary from plan-to-plan. For example, there are variables such as how the money or contributions are set aside, who makes contributions, how the income is generated, when payments are made, the types of payments that are made, and how long pension payments last. The basic idea is that the longer you work the higher the payout. There may be tax breaks for pension contributions and there are limits on how much can go into a plan. Many pensions are payable to a surviving spouse on the death of the policyholder, and some pension payments are inflation-adjusted. The term pension is most often associated with defined benefit pension plans that provide regular, annuity-like payments to retirees. This is in contrast to defined contribution plans such as the 401k that shift most responsibilities onto employees and do not provide guaranteed lifetime income.

Pensions and Annuities in the UK

Just read an interesting article in the Fool about the decline of personal pensions in the UK: http://www.fool.co.uk/news/investing/2010/02/15/a-decade-of-plunging-pen...

Annuities and Other Forms of Guaranteed Income are Priorities for the Obama Administration

Much has been written over the past couple of weeks about the Obama Administration's support of annuities.

The New York Times ran a story about the "unloved annuity getting a hug from Obama."

Bloomberg featured an article in its personal finance section describing the potential, the pitfalls and the overall industry enthusiasm surrounding in-plan annuities.

The federal government has posted a...

Longevity Market Leaps Ahead with Launch of Life and Longevity Markets Association

A group of banks and insurance companies recently formed a London-based trade group called the Life and Longevity Markets Association (LLMA). The LLMA aims to develop a liquid market for longevity risk that taps into broader capital markets rather than just the balance sheets of certain insurers and reinsurers. A core focus will be on longevity swaps and making the longevity swap transaction process more efficient. Longevity swaps serve as a risk transfer alternative to pension buyouts. The...

Inflation and Fixed Indexed Annuities

This forum thread is a continuation of a conversation that began as a comment and can be found here:

http://www.annuitydigest.com/blog/tom/fixed-annuity-sales-continue-soar-while-massive-inflation-risks-are-ignored#comment-363

The comment came from Phillip Hawley and is as follows:

Forums: 

Annuities Suggested as Part of Pension Reform in China

China's pension system is in need of reform. The current pay-as-you-go system only covers 30 percent of the population and is funded by a 28 percent payroll tax on participating companies. The remainder of the system is unfunded with liabilities that total almost 140 percent of China's current GDP. Boston University Professor Laurence Kotlikoff provides an interesting set of remedies in a recent op-ed piece. Included in Kotlikoff's set recommendations is the notion of mandatory, state-...

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