By Kelly Johnson
“Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit From the Nest Eggs of American Workers”
A book by Ellen E. Schultz
A book by Ellen E. Schultz
Hey, Occupy Wall Street. Here’s a book to
rally around. Looking for a study of the wealth disparity that’s sent
you to the streets? Ellen E. Schultz offers a guide. “Retirement Heist”
is a concise and alarming look at how—in the span of a generation—the 1
percent has looted the futures of the 99 percent.
Schultz wields expertise from years of
investigative reporting on the retirement crisis for The Wall Street
Journal. Time was, she writes, when pension funds had “such massive
surpluses that the companies could have fully paid their current and
future retirees’ pensions, even if all of them lived to be ninety-nine
and the companies never contributed another dime.”
Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit from the Nest Eggs of American Workers
By Ellen E. Schultz
Portfolio Hardcover, 256 pages
With slick accounting tricks, Schultz
writes, corporate America has funneled billions of dollars out of
pension funds. Many companies used the money to pay for
downsizing—covering early-retirement buyouts, which are considered
voluntary, instead of imposing a layoff and cash severance. Some funds
were simply terminated, and the money was used to offset operating
expenses. And so, company by company, a great surplus dwindled.
To replenish the pension funds, companies
cut benefits, Schultz writes. Their gains were immediate: Earnings got a
boost. The companies’ obligations were cut. Their bottom lines were
bolstered. It took much longer for workers’ losses to register: In many
of the cases Schultz cites, workers realized the damage only once they
were old and sick and had little in the way of resources to embark on a
protracted legal battle.
It’s utterly depressing, and that’s just
the start. Having plundered the pensions, companies exploited 401(k)
plans to borrow money cheaply. With pensions underfunded or frozen, they
dug into retiree health plans. The trend of tying executive pay to
performance only made matters worse, Schultz explains, leading, for
instance, to the death-benefit bamboozle, whereby companies take out
life insurance policies on their employees. When a worker dies, even if
he’s long since found other work or retired, the company cashes in on
the death benefit, tax-free. In many of these cases, the payout to the
company dwarfs whatever benefit might go to the next of kin.
Schultz provides an anatomy of every
abomination and shows how it unfolded in individual lives. The aggrieved
were engineers and miners, pro football players and pilots.
Distressingly, they appeared powerless to stop this bilking or defend
themselves against it. If the retirement industry isn’t reined in, she
concludes, we’ll be right back where we were in the 1930s, and
“society—and taxpayers—will be paying for services to support the
millions of elderly, formerly middle-class Americans.”
To see long excerpts from “Retirement Heist” at Google Books, click here. |
© 2011, Washington Post Book World
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