Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- ERISA (6)
- Pensions (3)
- Employee benefits (2)
- 401(k) (1)
- 403(b) (1)
-
- Benefits (1)
- Book reviews (1)
- Breach of claims (1)
- Central Falls (1)
- Chapter 9 of the bankruptcy code (1)
- Conflicts of interest (1)
- Contract clause (1)
- Contracts (1)
- Corporate governance (1)
- Defined benefit pension plan (1)
- Defined benefits pensions (1)
- Defined contribution pensions (1)
- Discimination (1)
- Domestic Relations (1)
- ERISA fiduciary liability (1)
- Employee Retirement Income Security Act (1)
- FAS 106 (1)
- FASB (1)
- Family Law (1)
- Fee claims (1)
- Finance (1)
- Financial Accounting Standards Board (1)
- Fixed annuity (1)
- GASB 45 (1)
- GASB statement 68 (1)
Articles 1 - 17 of 17
Full-Text Articles in Law
Understanding University Fee Litigation: A Few Lessons About The Perils Of Imprudence For Higher Ed Plan Sponsors, Maria O'Brien, Calvin Utter
Understanding University Fee Litigation: A Few Lessons About The Perils Of Imprudence For Higher Ed Plan Sponsors, Maria O'Brien, Calvin Utter
Faculty Scholarship
Beginning in August 2016, a series of class action lawsuits were filed on behalf of participants and beneficiaries of 403(b) employee retirement plans sponsored by major American colleges and universities. These plans are regulated by the 1974 Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”), which sets minimum standards to protect the participants and beneficiaries of voluntarily established retirement and health plans. The allegations in the several lawsuits have centered primarily around breaches of fiduciary duties by those charged with administering the plan.
These cases are all class action lawsuits brought on behalf of the participants and beneficiaries of the plans in …
Reforming Pensions While Retaining Shareholder Voice, David H. Webber
Reforming Pensions While Retaining Shareholder Voice, David H. Webber
Faculty Scholarship
Public pension and labor union funds have been the driving force in diversified shareholder activism. They have also fended off attacks on jobs and proactively created jobs for fund contributors. These funds currently represent almost $4 trillion in assets over which workers have substantial control. That worker control - and the collective nature of defined benefit pension plans - is the necessary precondition for their shareholder activism. Both worker control and collective investment are directly threatened by the rise of defined contribution funds, particularly by well-funded efforts to promote the 401(k) in the public sector, the last bastion of the …
After Tackett: Incomplete Contracts For Post-Employment Healthcare, Maria O'Brien
After Tackett: Incomplete Contracts For Post-Employment Healthcare, Maria O'Brien
Faculty Scholarship
This paper examines the recent U.S. Supreme Court retiree health care decision in Tackett v. M & G Polymers and focuses, in particular, on the ostensibly odd silence with respect to a critical contract term — whether the parties in fact agreed that these benefits were vested. Although the union in Tackett insisted these welfare benefits were clearly intended to vest and the employer now asserts they can be modified at any time, the collective bargaining agreement and supporting documents are ambiguous on this question. This paper examines how and why this “silence” persisted for so many decades and concludes …
The Case For Public Pension Reform: Early Evidence From Kentucky, Maria O'Brien
The Case For Public Pension Reform: Early Evidence From Kentucky, Maria O'Brien
Faculty Scholarship
Kentucky has managed to effect major changes to some of its pension plans in the face of poor funding ratios that threatened to swamp other budget priorities. At this point it is unclear whether the reforms are deep enough to bring the plans funding levels in line with those of “healthy” states like Wisconsin. It is also unclear whether there is the political will in other jurisdictions to curb costs by moving to defined contribution or hybrid cash balance vehicles. Transparency combined with a fear that pension obligations would soon swamp all other state budget priorities appears to have been …
Central Falls Retirees V. Bondholders: Assessing Fear Of Contagion In Chapter 9 Proceedings, Maria O'Brien
Central Falls Retirees V. Bondholders: Assessing Fear Of Contagion In Chapter 9 Proceedings, Maria O'Brien
Faculty Scholarship
Modern Chapter 9 litigation has been characterized by extraordinary protections for municipal bondholders, and Central Falls is no exception. Although not well understood by politicians, fear of contagion has encouraged the adoption of legal arrangements that have limited the bankruptcy courts’ ability to include bondholders in the cost of restructuring municipal debt. This preference for bondholders (and, by extension, their insurers) has meant increased misery for taxpayers and retirees. Given that all of these actors appear to have been complicit to some degree in the creation and maintenance of the fiscally imprudent conditions that triggered bankruptcy and that evidence of …
Thoughts On The Latest Battles Over Erisa's Remedies, Brendan S. Maher
Thoughts On The Latest Battles Over Erisa's Remedies, Brendan S. Maher
Faculty Scholarship
It is extraordinarily unlikely that the drafters of ERISA foresaw the effect the statute would have on federal courts and American economic life. It was originally conceived as a "pension bill of rights" designed to ensure that workers received the fixed monthly pension payment (based on tenure and average salary) that they had been promised. It grew, however, into the most litigated statute in the United States Code; to govern increasingly popular individual retirement savings accounts, e.g., 401(k) accounts;4 to be the central statute regulating employment based health insurance, which covers over one hundred and sixty million people; to be …
Disclosure To The Rescue: A Conceptual Framework For Retained Asset Accounts, Maria O'Brien
Disclosure To The Rescue: A Conceptual Framework For Retained Asset Accounts, Maria O'Brien
Faculty Scholarship
RAAs (Retained Asset Accounts) are a life insurance innovation that is likely of small value to most beneficiaries. In many cases, it will make the most financial sense for a beneficiary to write a check to himself for the entire policy proceeds and deposit those funds into an insured bank account. Some beneficiaries, however, may find the RAA device helpful. It is impossible to anticipate the myriad circumstances that beneficiaries may face at the time of an insured's death. As long as insurers provide full and clear disclosure (which ERISA fiduciary standards demand), consumers should remain free to choose an …
The Public Pension Crisis, Jack M. Beermann
The Public Pension Crisis, Jack M. Beermann
Faculty Scholarship
Unfunded employee pension obligations will present a serious fiscal problem to state and local governments in the not too distant future. This article takes a looks at the causes and potential cures for the public pension mess, mainly through the lens of legal doctrines that limit public employers’ ability to avoid obligations. As far as the causes are concerned, this article examines the political environment within which public pension promises are made and funded, as an attempt to understand how this occurred. The article then turns to ask if states could implement meaningful reforms without violating either state or federal …
Combating Moral Hazard: The Case For Rationalizing Public Employee Benefits, Maria O'Brien
Combating Moral Hazard: The Case For Rationalizing Public Employee Benefits, Maria O'Brien
Faculty Scholarship
The current crisis in public employee benefits is a fairly conventional moral hazard story about overly generous promises made by both private sector employers and politicians spending public dollars. The private sector, forced by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) in 1993 to confront the true cost of promises made to future retirees, dealt with the newly discovered debt in a number of ways, including the termination of defined benefit plans which were quickly replaced by defined contribution plans. The public sector was also forced to confront its own largesse with the implementation of GASB 45 which focused careful attention …
A Primer On The History And Proper Drafting Of Qualified Domestic-Relations Orders, Terrence Cain
A Primer On The History And Proper Drafting Of Qualified Domestic-Relations Orders, Terrence Cain
Faculty Scholarship
The divorce rate in the United States is slightly more than one-half the marriage rate. Divorce is a fact of life in this country, and will likely be so for the foreseeable future. On August 23, 1984, the divorce lawyer’s job got more complicated when Congress created the Qualified Domestic Relations Order ("QDRO") as part of some significant amendments to ERISA. QDROs are necessary because before those 1984 ERISA amendments, a lot of divorced persons discovered that they could be deprived of their marital or community property interest in their former spouses' retirement plans. For most divorcing couples, the two …
Erisa & Uncertainty, Brendan S. Maher, Peter K. Stris
Erisa & Uncertainty, Brendan S. Maher, Peter K. Stris
Faculty Scholarship
In the United States, retirement income and health insurance are largely provided through private promises made incident to employment. These “benefit promises” are governed by a statute called ERISA, which many healthcare and pension scholars argue is the cause of fundamental problems with our nation’s health and retirement policy. Inevitably, however, they advance narrowly tailored proposals to amend the statute. This occurs because of the widely-held view that reform should leave undisturbed the underlying core of the statute. This Article develops a theory of ERISA designed to illustrate the unavoidable need for structural reform.
Marriage, Property And [In]Equality: Remedying Erisa's Disparate Impact On Spousal Wealth, Paula A. Monopoli
Marriage, Property And [In]Equality: Remedying Erisa's Disparate Impact On Spousal Wealth, Paula A. Monopoli
Faculty Scholarship
Congress is considering pension reform in the wake of the tremendous loss in market value of retirement plans during the current recession. This article suggests that this is a historic moment to remedy a previously unidentified, unintended but profound gender disparity embedded in the federal law governing retirement plans in this country. It explores the common perception that while contemporary law and policy aim to facilitate equality within marriage, including in the area of property ownership, embracing equitable distribution in reallocating property upon divorce, the Employment Retirement Income Security Act’s (ERISA) structuring of retirement asset accumulation runs counter to this …
Understanding And Problematizing Contractual Tort Subrogation, Brendan S. Maher, Radha A. Pathak
Understanding And Problematizing Contractual Tort Subrogation, Brendan S. Maher, Radha A. Pathak
Faculty Scholarship
The modern incarnation of tort subrogation allows an insurer to force its insured to turn over the litigation proceeds independently obtained by the insured against a third-party tortfeasor, even if the insured has not been made whole by such litigation. This Article demonstrates that such a result is the product of a subrogation-as-contract paradigm that has taken hold in the federal system, most notably by the United States Supreme Court in Sereboff v. Mid-Atlantic Services, 547 U.S. 356 (2006). More importantly, the Article illustrates the conceptual and historical roots of subrogation to demonstrate the extent to which subrogation-as-contract is divorced …
Together We Can: Imagining The Future Of Employee Pensions, Maria O'Brien
Together We Can: Imagining The Future Of Employee Pensions, Maria O'Brien
Faculty Scholarship
Reviewing Teresa Ghilarducci & Christian E. Weller, Eds. Employee Pensions: Policies, Problems & Possibilities (LERA 2007)
A little over thirty years ago Congress enacted the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA),1 a comprehensive reform of the existing system of pension regulation.2 Solidly into its fourth decade, ERISA has been the object of much commentary as the various federal courts have struggled to infuse its complicated and sometimes imprecise pieces with coherent meaning. 3 Some have suggested that ERISA's primary goal of reducing the risk to employees of employer default has largely been achieved.4 Others believe that almost …
Federal Pension Benefits: The Reach Of Preemption, Marsha N. Cohen
Federal Pension Benefits: The Reach Of Preemption, Marsha N. Cohen
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Disposing Of A Pre-Existing H.R. 10 Plan In Connection With A Post-Erisa Business Incorporation, J. Clifton Fleming Jr.
Disposing Of A Pre-Existing H.R. 10 Plan In Connection With A Post-Erisa Business Incorporation, J. Clifton Fleming Jr.
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Variable Annuities, Variable Insurance And Separate Accounts, Tamar Frankel
Variable Annuities, Variable Insurance And Separate Accounts, Tamar Frankel
Faculty Scholarship
The variable annuity is a novel retirement plan. It was devised to minimize the inadequacies of a fixed-dollar annuity as a retirement device. Inflation and an accelerating standard of living have left persons receiving fixed-dollar annuities with only a fraction of the income required to meet their needs.