
Perfect
Storm Prompts Changes in Pension Accounting
Postretirement
obligations move to financial statements while
FASB considers more comprehensive changes to
underlying measurements.
by Paul
B.W. Miller and Paul R. Bahnson
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EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
FASB has issued
Statement no. 158, Employers
Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension
and Other Postretirement Plans, to
reform accounting for pension and other
postretirement benefit plans. The new
statement requires companies to move
off-balance-sheet items onto their
financial statements. The schedule of
comprehensive income would show changes
to prior service costs and accumulated
actuarial gains caused by new events and
amortization. FASB has also changed
required footnote disclosures for
pension and other postretirement benefit
plans. Companies must disclose the nature
and amount of changes in plan assets and
benefit obligations recognized in net
income and in other comprehensive income
for each reported period. They also must
disclose changes in plan assets and
benefit obligations that have been
deferred and recognized in other
comprehensive income.
Companies can
consider using an alternate footnote
disclosure that contains the
same information required by Statement
no. 158 but also presents additional
information, specifically reconciliations
of the beginning and ending balances of
the deferred components. Financial
analysts and other financial statement
users may find this information useful.
The new provisions
apply to other postretirement benefits as
well as pensions. Once the calculations
for all plans are complete, the employer
must aggregate the net balances of all
overfunded plans into a single asset. The
employer then must aggregate the net
balances of all underfunded plans into a
single liability.
FASBs new
pension rules will improve access to
pension-related information and make it
easier for financial statement users to
understand. FASB has already initiated a
second phase of the project to identify
and eliminate other flaws in pension
accounting in the future.
Paul
B.W. Miller, CPA,
Ph.D., is professor of accounting at the
University of Colorado at Colorado
Springs. His e-mail is pmiller@uccs.edu.
Paul R. Bahnson, CPA,
Ph.D., is professor of accounting at
Boise State University in Boise, Idaho.
His e-mail is pbahnson@boisestate.edu.
|
ver
the first half of the decade, pension and other
postretirement benefit plans were hit hard by a
perfect storm of economic forces. Investment
returns were irregular and often less than
expected. Falling interest rates caused
employers obligations to soar. And many
old-line industries experienced a cash crunch
that encouraged management to offer increased
pension benefits in lieu of higher wages. A shift
in demographics has resulted in far fewer younger
workers and many more who have retired or are
about to do so.
These
factors combined to create severely underfunded
pension and other benefit plans with growing
expenses and losses. The then-applicable
accounting standards kept these effects off
financial statements, possibly diverting public
attention. Only when large bankruptcies aroused
concerns that the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.
would not have the wherewithal to bail out the
troubled plans did the crisis draw widespread
interest.
This
confluence of events heightened awareness that
accounting standards needed substantial repair,
if not outright replacement. In response, FASB
created a two-phase project. The goal of the
first phase, now complete in the form of FASB
Statement no. 158, Employers Accounting
for Defined Benefit Pension and Other
Postretirement Plans, was to move
off-balance-sheet items onto the financial
statements. The second phase, in cooperation with
the International Accounting Standards Board
(IASB), will take a more careful look at the
issues including assumptions used in measuring
benefit obligations and whether postretirement
benefit trusts should be consolidated with
sponsors financial statements.
Statement
no. 158 was released in September 2006, with an
effective date that requires public companies to
implement it for fiscal years ending after Dec.
15, 2006. Private companies are required to
implement the new standard for fiscal years
ending after June 15, 2007.
| Bottom-Line
Hit In
a 2006 study of 100 large U.S.
corporations that sponsor defined benefit
plans, 30 reported pretax pension and
other benefit charges to shareholder
equity in 2005, up from 26 the previous
year. Had FASB Statement no. 158 been in
effect, 49 companies each would have
declared a pretax charge in excess of $1
billion.
Source:
Milliman, Seattle, www.milliman.com.
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FASB 158 IN A
NUTSHELL
FASBs action established new practices in
several areas without changing the basic
measurements under Statement no. 87, Employers
Accounting for Pensions, and Statement no.
106, Employers Accounting for
Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions. Basically,
Statement no. 158 requires companies to take
information out of the footnotes and put it into
the body of the financial statements as follows:
The balance sheet reports a net asset or net
liability equal to the difference between the
estimated values of the projected benefit
obligation and fund assets as of the balance
sheet date.
The balance sheet also presents a positive or
negative component of accumulated comprehensive
income equal to the sum of the previously
off-the-books memo accounts for deferred effects
of plan amendments and accumulated deferred gains
and losses.
The statement or schedule of comprehensive income
presents changes in the prior service costs and
accumulated actuarial gains caused by new events
and amortization.
The minimum
liability reporting requirements have been
eliminated. The standard changes employers
balance sheets but doesnt alter the annual
cost calculation. The required footnote
disclosures now include an estimate of the coming
years amortization of prior service cost
and any corridor amortization (an expense
adjustment that occurs when accumulated
unrecognized gains or losses exceed 10% of the
greater of the plan assets or projected benefit
obligation).
A NEW
WORKSHEET
The changed status of the formerly off-the-books
amounts means employers must complete a different
set of calculations. This section describes a
worksheet CPAs can use to produce the required
results, including the annual cost, as well as
reconciliations of the beginning and ending
balances of the asset, obligation and components
of other comprehensive income. The worksheet also
supports the journal entry needed to record the
years events (for simplicity, the entry
does not include deferred tax effects).
Exhibit
1 shows the
information for the first three years in the life
of a new defined benefit plan. In 2006, the
employer creates a plan with no prior service
costs and incurs a service cost of $2,000.
Because no liability existed during the year, no
interest expense was incurred. No return was
earned because the $3,000 funding occurred at
year-end.
| |
Example
Data |
| Year |
2006 |
2007
|
2008 |
| Service
cost |
$2,000
|
$2,400 |
$2,800 |
| Interest
rate on benefit
obligation |
7% |
8% |
8% |
| Expected
return on pension assets
(rate) |
9% |
9% |
9% |
| Actual
return (loss) on pension
assets |
n/a |
$(200) |
$700 |
| Plan
amendment (prior service
cost) |
n/a
|
$750
|
n/a |
| Actuarial
liability increase
(decrease) |
n/a |
$800 |
$(300) |
| Employer
contributions (at end of
year) |
$3,000 |
$3,500 |
$500 |
| Benefits
paid (at end of year) |
n/a
|
$400 |
$440 |
| Average
service life of
participants (years) |
n/a
|
5 |
5 |
|
|
No worksheet
is needed for the first year because there are no
deferred items. This journal entry records the
effects of the plan:
| Annual
pension cost |
$2,000 |
|
| Plan
assets |
$3,000 |
|
Pension obligation |
$2,000 |
Cash |
$3,000 |
The 2006
balance sheet reports a net plan asset of $1,000.
In 2007,
$160 of interest accrues on the obligation. The
plan assets suffer a $200 loss instead of earning
the expected $270 gain (9% of $3,000). The plan
is amended to increase benefits by a present
value of $750. Despite an increase in the market
interest rate used to discount the future cash
flows, the actuarys measure of the
obligation increases by a net amount of $800
because of changes in economic and demographic
factors for the covered population. The employer
contributes $3,500 at year-end and benefits of
$400 are paid out. As part of the annual cost
measurement, the plan amendment cost of $750 is
amortized straight-line over the five-year
average remaining service life of covered
employees at $150 per year. The worksheet appears
in Exhibit 2.
| |
Worksheet
for 2007 |
|
|
The leftmost
column lists pension-related factors, starting
with the beginning balances, moving through the
years events and finishing with the ending
balances. The first numerical column compiles the
reported annual cost. The next five show how
individual events affected the balance sheet
accounts, including the last two that show the
changes in the two pension-related components of
accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI),
which is reported in equity.
The
following worksheet entries capture these events:
Service
cost. Records the $2,400 increase
in the obligation from new accrued benefits with
a credit in the fourth column while the
offsetting debit increases annual pension cost in
the first column.
Interest
expense. Records $160 (8% of
$2,000) of accrued interest as a credit that
increases the obligation and a corresponding
debit that increases the annual pension cost.
Actual
return. Records the years
actual loss with a $200 credit to the pension
assets balance and debits the loss to the
years annual pension cost.
Unexpected
return adjustment. Adjusts the
annual cost to equal what it would have been if
the plan assets had earned the expected return of
$270 (9% of the $3,000 beginning balance). The
$470 credit in the first column counteracts the
effects of the actual $200 debit to achieve the
desired net credit of $270. The offsetting $470
debit is recorded in the deferred actuarial
gain/loss column as part of AOCI.
Plan
amendments. Records the $750
increase in the obligation from the prior service
amendment. Notice that the full amount is
initially deferred with a debit entry to the
comprehensive income account for the effects of
amendments.
Actuarial
changes. Records the $800 increase
in the liability for the actuarys
adjustment while the corresponding debit is added
to the deferred actuarial gain or loss component
of other comprehensive income.
Amortization.
Prior service cost is not deferred
indefinitely but amortized over the
employees remaining service period, in this
case at the rate of $150 per year. The
amortization is recorded with a debit to the
annual cost and a credit to the deferred
amendments component of other comprehensive
income.
Contributions.
When the employer puts cash in the
fund, the event is recorded with a $3,500 credit
to cash and an equal debit to the plan assets
account.
Benefits.
When benefits are paid, they are
recorded by reducing the pension assets balance
with a $400 credit, while reducing the liability
with an equal debit.
The
total line in the worksheet shows the
aggregate pension cost is $2,440, with the other
changes as shown. The information on this line
leads to the years journal entry:
| Annual
pension cost |
$2,440 |
|
| Plan
assets |
$2,900 |
|
| AOCIplan
amendments |
$600 |
|
| AOCIdeferred
gain/loss |
$1,270 |
|
|
Pension obligation |
$3,710 |
|
|
Cash |
$3,500 |
|
The 2007
balance sheet reports a $190 net pension asset
($5,900 $5,710). A later section describes
our recommendations for disclosures that go
beyond Statement no. 158s minimum
requirements.
Exhibit
3 shows the
2008 worksheet. The years events are both
similar to and different from 2007. The similar
items include service cost and interest,
amortization of the plan amendments effects
and the contributions and benefit payments. The
actual return was larger than expected and
another actuarial change reduced the pension
obligation. Conditions at the beginning of the
year also called for corridor amortization of the
deferred actuarial gain/loss.
| |
Worksheet
for 2008 |
|
|
Here are
details of items that are different in 2008:
Actual
return. Records the years
actual gain with a $700 debit to the pension
assets balance and deducts it from the
years cost by crediting the same amount in
the annual cost column.
Unexpected
asset return. Adjusts the annual
cost to equal what it would have been if the plan
assets had earned the expected return of $531 (9%
of the $5,900 beginning balance). The $169 debit
in the first column accomplishes the adjustment.
The net effect of the $700 credit and the $169
debit is the desired $531 credit. The offsetting
$169 credit reduces the deferred actuarial
gain/loss component of other comprehensive
income.
Actuarial
changes. Records the $300 decrease
in the liability for the actuarys
adjustment with a debit in the obligation column
and a credit to other comprehensive income in the
deferred actuarial gain/loss column.
Corridor
amortization. Because the beginning
deferred actuarial loss of $1,270 is larger than
the $590 corridor (10% of beginning plan assets
of $5,900), the $680 excess deferral ($1,270
$590) is divided by the five-year service
period to produce the $136 one-time adjustment
that is added to the years pension cost and
deducted from comprehensive income. (To help
financial statement users predict the future
expense, Statement no. 158 requires management to
disclose this anticipated amount in the prior
years footnote along with the $150 expected
amortization of the prior service costs.)
This journal
entry for 2008 can be derived from the
total line in the worksheet:
| Annual
pension cost |
$3,012 |
|
| Plan
assets |
$760 |
|
AOCIplan
amendments |
|
$150 |
|
AOCIdeferred
gain/loss |
|
$605 |
|
Pension obligation |
|
$2,517 |
Cash |
|
$500 |
After this
entry, the 2008 balance sheet will report a
$1,567 net pension liability ($6,660
$8,227).
THE
RECOMMENDED
FOOTNOTE
Among other items, FASBs required footnote
disclosures include:
The nature and amount of changes in plan assets
and benefit obligations recognized in net income
and in other comprehensive income for each
reported period.
The changes in plan assets and benefit
obligations that have been deferred and
recognized in other comprehensive income.
After
reviewing the standard, we believe the
disclosures can be made even more complete and
transparent. Exhibit
4 uses the
2007 and 2008 data to illustrate our recommended
schedule. Although it reports the same numbers in
the spreadsheet, we designed it to present the
facts in a readily interpretable format, as
described below:
The first numeric column presents the components
of the annual cost, including the basic items
plus the effects of the deferrals and
amortization for the year.
The second column describes the changes that
occurred in the pension assets for the actual
return, contributions, and benefits paid out.
The third column describes the changes that
occurred in the pension obligation for the
years service and interest cost, benefits
paid, and changes from plan amendments and
actuarial adjustments.
The fourth column summarizes the years
changes in AOCI; the total change for the year is
reported on the statement or schedule of
comprehensive income.
The fifth and sixth columns reconcile the
beginning and ending balances of the two items of
other comprehensive income for plan amendments
and deferred gains and losses.
| |
Footnote
for 2007-2008 |
|
|
Our
recommended footnote meets the minimum
requirements imposed by Statement no. 158 but
also presents additional useful facts,
specifically the reconciliations of the beginning
and ending balances of the deferred components.
This information can occasionally be inferred
from the required minimum presentations, but only
with much extra effort, to the frustration of
some financial analysts. We believe our format
offers substantial advantages over the status quo
in terms of completeness and accessibility.
ADDITIONAL
POINTS
FASB addressed three other key issues. First, the
board decided it would not require managers to
apply the new standard retrospectively to the
beginning of the earliest year on the comparative
income statement in their financial reports.
However FASB recommends the restatement be
accomplished; doing so will improve the
comparability and usefulness of the financial
statements.
To get the
accounts into their needed condition as of that
earlier date, the employer will record an
adjustment that debits a new pension assets
account for its market value and credits a new
pension obligation account for its estimated
value. Then, the adjusting entry will create
accounts as needed for accumulated other
comprehensive income items describing deferred
prior service costs and actuarial gains and
losses. In addition, the employer will close the
Statement no. 87 prepaid/accrued pension cost
account. The employer will then debit or credit
any remaining difference to retained earnings as
needed. This last amount will equal the balance,
if any, of the deferred transition gain or loss
left over from the initial application of
Statement no. 87. This analysis is illustrated in
Exhibit 5
using year-end 2004 numbers from
ExxonMobils 2005 form 10-K.
| |
Journal
Entry for ExxonMobil as of Jan.
1, 2005 |
|
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FASB also
amended accounting practices for settlements and
terminations as governed by Statement no. 88, Employers
Accounting for Settlements and Curtailments of
Defined Benefit Pension Plans and for Termination
Benefits, which used to require that the
financial statements recognize changes in various
on- and off-the-books accounts. With suitable
modifications, the basic worksheet and footnote
schedule can deal with these events.
The new
standard applies to other postretirement benefits
as well as pensions. Once the calculations are
complete for all plans, the employer must
aggregate the net balances of all overfunded
pension and other benefit plans into a single
asset on the balance sheet. Then, the employer
will aggregate the net balances of all
underfunded plans into a single liability.
AN
INTERIM
FIX
Despite its significant changes, Statement no.
158 is only FASBs interim solution for
improving users access to pension-related
information. The new standard should reduce
uncertainty and lower users risks while
decreasing their processing costs, with the
ultimate result of higher stock prices. Some
managers objected to the proposal, perhaps out of
fear the new presentation would reduce the market
values of their securities. This reduction could
happen only if moving information from the
footnotes to the balance sheet would cause users
to lower their estimates of the employers
future cash inflows or to perceive greater risk.
In either event, the managers premise seems
to be that their companies shares were
previously overpriced because the market was
misinformed. We dont expect such downward
adjustments to occur. Even if they were to
happen, the new standard would be working for the
best because the goal of sound financial
reporting is to boost capital market efficiency
by increasing the quality of information.
WHATS
NEXT?
While Statement no.158 will provide more
transparent information about companies
postretirement benefit obligations, influential
bodies including the SEC, the CFA Institute, and
the Financial Accounting Standards Advisory
Council have called for a more complete
reformation of GAAP, even to the point of calling
for consolidating the financial statements of the
parent and the pension plan. FASB, together with
the IASB, has pledged to consider these issues in
the second phase of its project on pension
accounting. Specific areas to be addressed
include comprehensively considering how the
elements that affect the cost of postretirement
benefits are best recognized and displayed in the
statement of earnings and comprehensive income,
how to measure an entitys benefit
obligations and whether postretirement benefit
trusts should be consolidated by the plan
sponsor. 
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