首页
登录
职称英语
In early June, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OE
In early June, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OE
游客
2023-12-21
124
管理
问题
In early June, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)—the club of the world’s wealthy and almost wealthy nations—released a 208-page document perversely titled Pensions at a Glance. Inside is a rundown of how generous OECD members are to their burgeoning ranks of retirees.
The US is near the bottom, with the average wage earner able to count on a government-mandated pension for just 52.4% of what he got (after taxes) in his working days—and higher-income workers even less. But the picture at the other end of the scale (dominated by Continental Europe) is misleading. Most of these governments haven’t put aside money for pensions. As the ranks of retirees grow and workforces do not, countries will have to either renege on commitments or tax the hides off future workers.
What the OECD data seem to suggest is that you can run a retirement plan that’s fiscally sound but stingy, or you can make big promises that will eventually go sour. The US fits mostly in the former category—for all the gnashing of teeth about Social Security, its funding problems are modest by global standards.
But is that really the choice? Actually, no. At least one country appears to have found a better way. In the Netherlands—"the globe’s No. 1 pensions country," says influential retirement-plan consultant Keith Ambachtsheer—the average retiree can count on a pension equal to 96.8% of his working income. Ample money is set aside to fund pensions, and it is invested prudently but not timidly. Companies contribute to employees’ accounts but aren’t stuck with profit-killing obligations if their business shrinks or the stock market tanks.
The Dutch have steered a middle way between irresponsible Continental generosity and practical Anglo-American stinginess. They have also, to lapse into pension jargon, split the difference between DB and DC plans. In a defined-benefit (DB) plan, workers are promised a retirement income, and the sponsor—usually a corporation or government—is on the hook to provide it. In a defined-contribution (DC) plan, the worker and sometimes the employer set aside money and hope it will be enough.
The big problem with DB is that sponsors are prone to lowball or ignore the true cost. In the US, where corporate pensions provide a key supplement to Social Security, Congress has felt the need to pass multiple laws aimed at preventing companies from underfunding them. In response, some companies spent billions shoring up their funds; many others simply stopped offering pensions. Just since 2004, at least 66 big companies have frozen or terminated their DB plans, estimates Barclays Global Investors. Corporate DB has given way to individual DC plans like the 401 (k) and IRA, But these put too much responsibility on the shoulders of individual workers. Many don’t save enough money, and those who do set aside enough earn returns that are on average much lower than those of pension funds.
The Netherlands, like the US, has long relied on workplace pensions to supplement its government plan. The crucial difference is that these pensions were mandatory. Smaller employers had to band together to make a go of it, and industry-wide funds became standard. Run more as independent cooperatives than as captive corporate divisions, the Dutch funds were less prone to underfunding than their US counterparts. When they nonetheless ran into financial trouble in 2002 after the stock market crashed and interest rates sank, the country came up with a unique response. The Dutch funds are now no longer on the hook for providing a set income in retirement no matter what happens to financial markets—that is, they’ve gone DC—but they didn’t shunt everything to individual workers. Risks are shared by all the members of a pension fund, and the money is managed by professionals.
Pension consultant Ambachtsheer argues that this "collective DC" is just what the US needs. Many companies here are improving 401 (k)s to give employees more guidance, and there’s talk in Washington of supplementing (not supplanting) Social Security with near mandatory retirement accounts. But even those changes would fall well short of going Dutch. Countries don’t always set aside enough money to pay for the pensions they promise. [br] All of the following are true about DB plan EXCEPT that______.
选项
A、the sponsor provides retirement income when the money workers have been setting aside is not enough
B、it is adopted in the United States
C、under a DB plan, companies may provide less money for pensions than needed
D、currently it is not as preferred as individual DC plans in the United States
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:http://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3294040.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]TheWorldHealthOrganizationestimatesthatmorethanforty-mill
[originaltext]TheWorldHealthOrganizationestimatesthatmorethanforty-mill
[originaltext]TheWorldHealthOrganizationestimatesthatmorethanforty-mill
[originaltext]TheWorldHealthOrganizationestimatesthatmorethanforty-mill
[originaltext]Withthedevelopmentofscienceandtechnology,healthcaretoday
[originaltext]Withthedevelopmentofscienceandtechnology,healthcaretoday
TheWorldTradeOrganization(WTO)is【C1】______dealingwiththeglobalrulesof
TheWorldTradeOrganization(WTO)is【C1】______dealingwiththeglobalrulesof
TheWorldTradeOrganization(WTO)is【C1】______dealingwiththeglobalrulesof
TheWorldTradeOrganization(WTO)is【C1】______dealingwiththeglobalrulesof
随机试题
Forwellover2000yearstheworld’sgreatreligionshavetaughtthevirtue
Theconceptofobtainingfreshwaterfromicebergsthataretowedtopopula
某书校样多次出现古职官名“提点刑狱”,但前后写法有“提点刑狱”“指点刑狱”“提典
1.题目:人口的迁移 2.内容: 所谓人口迁移就是人的居住地在国际或本国
在VLAN中,每个虚拟局域网组成一个(),如果一个VLAN跨越多个交换机,则属于
阅读下述关于项目时间管理的说明,回答问题1至问题3,将解答填入答题纸的对应栏内。
扩张型心肌病左、右心室同时衰竭时,与临床症状和体征最有关的因素是A、静脉回流增加
关于屋面涂膜防水施工的说法,正确的有()。A、胎体增强材料的铺设应由屋面最高处向
下列文种中.行文方向固定的是( )。A.批复 B.意见 C.函 D.纪要
A.I、ⅡA、ⅢB、Ⅲ、Ⅳ和V B.CM、HDL、LDL、VLDL C.A、
最新回复
(
0
)