Pension

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Pension Blues

Guest
With 30 years at 55, management gets a pension equal to approximately 45-50% of their last 5 years averege wages, not including MIP, under the plan before recent changes.

New management and management born before 1979 get a 401K style pension equl to about half of the prior plan, or approximately 25% of thier final wages.
 

pretzel_man

Well-Known Member
With 30 years at 55, management gets a pension equal to approximately 45-50% of their last 5 years averege wages, not including MIP, under the plan before recent changes.

New management and management born before 1979 get a 401K style pension equl to about half of the prior plan, or approximately 25% of thier final wages.

While I havn't done the math, I don't think you're accurate about the new plan.

If you've done those calculations, I'd be interested in seeing your analysis and your assumptions. For instance, what did you assume as a growth rate?

Also, since its portable and owned by the employee, how did you account for that? I would think that in many ways, that would make the new plan very attractive?

P-Man
 
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