On Friday, yet another nail was put in the coffin of the defined-benefit pension in America. According to the Economic Policy Institute (EPI),
the percentage of U.S. private-sector retirement plans with defined
benefits fell by half between 1989 and 2010, from 42 to only 22 percent.
Yet this type of plan is much preferred by unions and worker advocates
over defined-contribution plans such 401(k)s, because if a company makes
bad investment decisions, workers’ retirement benefits don’t suffer.
Boeing is one of the few
remaining major corporations in the United States that still offers
defined-benefit pensions. But on Friday, 30,000 union Boeing workers in
Washington state voted to give up the pensions for new hires and to let the company freeze the plans for all workers in 2016.
“I don’t see a way forward on pensions. I don't see what it is that
we can do,” says Ross Eisenbrey, vice president of EPI, which advocates
for low- and middle-income workers. “Retirement security right now is
wishful thinking.”
The vote by members of the International Association of Machinists
(IAM) Lodge 751 came after Boeing threatened to move production of the
777X jet line, along with potentially thousands of jobs, out of
Washington state unless workers agreed to the contract. The workers voted down a similar contract in November, but Boeing refused to budge—even though the company is doing well, with over $400 billion dollars in back orders and a program to buy back more than $10 billion in its own stock.
In December, the international stepped in and forced the local, which
opposed the deal, to hold another vote. In a bid to keep their jobs,
the workers voted 51-to-49 percent on Friday to ratify the slightly
revised contract, which ends defined-benefit pensions and bans workers
from striking for eight years.
“Boeing is one more point in a long trend of employers shedding their
pension liability,” says Eisenbrey. “Looking ahead, they don’t want to
be in a situation where we go through another stock market plunge and
they wind up having to put a lot of money in the pensions’ problem. From
an employer's point of view, a defined-contribution plan is the easiest
thing, you just put in 3 percent from an employee's paycheck and they
invest. If the employee invests badly, then it’s their tough luck. Its
just simpler.”
The loss of pensions at Boeing marks a major setback for unions, as
employers typically follow the example of other employers at the
bargaining table in terms of what constitutes a reasonable demand. Since
the financial crash, unions have given up pensions for new hires at
large, profitable, industry trendsetters such as General Electric, Verizon, Honeywell and now, Boeing.
Though this marks a sea change toward retirement insecurity for tens
of thousands of U.S. workers during Obama's tenure, thus far the
president has said nothing about the trend.
While President Obama did not speak out on behalf of Boeing workers,
the President is quite open about being a major public advocate for
Boeing.
Speaking to the Export Council last September, President Obama said,
“I think Jim [McNerney, Chairman and CEO of Boeing], at least, will
confirm that I’m happy to go out and make sales. I’m expecting a gold
watch—(laughter)—from Boeing at the end of my presidency, because I know
that I’m on the list of top salesmen at Boeing. And that applies to all
of you.”
EPI's Eisenbrey says that the Obama administration has been much more
focused on cutting Social Security than shoring up American’s retirement
security. Last spring, the Obama Administration announced its support
for a proposal to amend Social Security known as “chained CPI,” which the AFL-CIO opposes because
it entails lower benefits for retirees. “We should be increasing
benefits and their proposal was to have a technical adjustment which was
a benefit cut,” says Eisenbrey.
As with many labor issues, the President has once again remained silent while union workers have taken a hit.
Meanwhile, Boeing workers are adjusting to less secure retirement
futures. John Kleiboeker, a Boeing worker of 16 years and the president
of the Machinists Local Lodge 63, told The Oregonian, "I've got 15 years to retirement. … I'm looking at a loss of $250,000.”
Taken from here
1 comment:
see here for the previous blog on Boeing's anti-worker onslaught
http://socialismoryourmoneyback.blogspot.com/2014/01/boeing-boeing-gone.html
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