FedEx Corp. has announced that it will freeze
its traditional pension plan, expand its cash-balance plan and make improvements
to its 401(k) plan.
The $34 billion delivery company said the
changes reflect accounting and funding rule changes, the Pension Protection
Act’s provisions on cash-balance plans and automating 401(k)s, and shifting
demographic trends.
Since last summer's Pension Protection Act
established that cash-balance plans don't discriminate against older workers,
MeadWestvaco said it would convert its traditional pension plan to a
cash-balance plan and another company, Phoenix Cos., announced that it would
convert its traditional pension plan to a pension-equity plan, another type of
hybrid pension plan.
FedEx already had a cash-balance plan,
instituted in 2003, in which it enrolled new hires. It had given existing
employees the choice of switching to the cash-balance plan or staying in the
pension plan. As of June 1, 2008, employees who are still in the traditional
pension plan will begin accruing benefits under the cash-balance plan; they will
not accrue additional benefits in the traditional plan but will be paid the
benefits they have already accrued when they retire.
In line with the Pension Protection Act’s
encouragement of automation in 401(k) plans, FedEx also said it will begin to
automatically enroll employees in its 401(k) and automatically increase their
savings rate each year. It will also add investment options and boost the
company match to a maximum of 3.5 percent of an employee’s salary; currently,
FedEx matches up to $500.
The company says that it does not expect the
changes it is making to alter the amount it spends on employee retirement plans.
A FedEx spokesman said the changes in retirement plans apply to 170,000
U.S. employees.
Separately, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.
announced that it will freeze its defined-benefit pension plans for salaried
workers at the end of 2008 and replace them with enhanced 401(k) benefits. At
the start of 2009, Goodyear will begin matching 50% of the first 4 percent of
pay that employees save in the salaried 401(k) plans.
Goodyear also said that it will redesign its
retiree medical benefits, including increasing the contributions that retirees
make toward the cost of those benefits.
Filed by Susan Kelly of Pensions & Investments, a sister
publication of Workforce Management.
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