Compensation and Working Conditions Online

Alternatives to Frozen Defined Benefit Pension Plans

by Scott F. Curtin
Bureau of Labor Statistics

Originally Posted: August 28, 2009

Since their introduction in the 1980s, 401k plans and other types of defined contribution plans have become the primary means of retirement savings, leading many employers to freeze their current defined benefit plan and provide alternatives, such as a new defined benefit plan, a new defined contribution plan, or an enhanced existing defined contribution plan.

Introduction

Defined benefit pension plans have played an integral role in developing retirement protection for millions of American workers. These pension plans have allowed retirees to secure monthly income for life, with payments based on service and salary. Such plans in the United States were initially developed to promote job stability and create a more career-minded labor force.1 Since their introduction in the 1980s, 401k plans--a type of defined contribution plan--have grown to become the a primary means of retirement savings, leading employers to replace their defined benefit plans with defined contribution plans for both current and new employees.

Many employers have opted to freeze their current defined benefit plan and provide an alternative. Alternatives available to employees include a new defined benefit plan, a new defined contribution plan, or an enhanced existing defined contribution plan.2 With the number of defined benefit plans steadily decreasing and frozen pension plans increasing, this migration could have major negative implications for those workers in the later stages of their career, where plan contributions may be at their highest. Employees are and will continue to be forced to reevaluate their retirement savings needs as employers alter their benefits package.

When a defined benefit plan is frozen, the employer may restrict entry into the plan and limit future contributions. The degree to which contributions and entry is limited will depend on the type of freeze. In some cases, an employee may stop accruing benefits in the event of a freeze, but the plan will continue in operation, protecting the benefits already accrued. Employers continue to make required contributions to fund accrued benefits.

BLS frozen plan data

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) recently began collecting data on frozen defined benefit pension plans, including details pertaining to the percent of workers participating in frozen plans, benefit accruals, and enrollment alternatives for employees in frozen plans. As chart 1 and table 1 show, data from the March 2008 National Compensation Survey (NCS) on employee benefits indicate that a fifth of all private industry workers participating in a defined benefit plan are affected by a freeze.3 A plan is considered frozen if the plan is closed to new workers or the plan ceased accruals for some or all plan participants.

Chart 1: Defined benefit retirement plan: Percent of participants in plans that have frozen benefits, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008

Prior to the availability of the NCS data, information on frozen plans came mostly from a Government Accountability Office (GAO) study released in 2008. GAO found that about half of all plan sponsors in their study population had one or more frozen defined benefit plans. Overall, about 3.3 million active participants in the study population, who represent about 21 percent of all active participants in the single-employer defined benefit system, are affected by a freeze.4 The March 2008 National Compensation Survey benefits data show that 21 percent of private industry workers had access to a defined benefit plan and 20 percent participated in a defined benefit plan (See table 2). According to a 2005 study by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, the number of private sector defined benefit plans peaked in the mid-1980s at 112,000, compared with about 30,000 at the time of the study.5

The type of freeze will determine what restrictions are in place on the current pension plan. As chart 2 shows, among those workers enrolled in a frozen plan, the majority (76 percent) were in plans under a “soft freeze,” which implies that the plan is closed to new entrants, but all current participants continue to accrue benefits. Another 21 percent were under a “hard freeze,” which implies that a plan is closed to new entrants and current participants no longer accrue additional benefits. (See table 3.)

Chart 2: Defined benefit frozen retirement plans: Percent of participants accruing benefits, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008

The remainder of this article concentrates on defining and discussing alternatives for those affected by a freeze in their benefit plan.

Plan alternatives

Of the private industry workers affected by a freeze, 96 percent had an alternative made available to them to help offset losses from their frozen defined benefit plan. Employees may be offered one of the following alternative retirement plans: a new defined benefit plan, an enhanced existing defined contribution plan, or a new defined contribution plan. (See table 4 for a detailed look into plan alternatives by worker and establishment characteristics and by wage percentiles.)

New defined benefit plan. As can be seen in chart 3, of all private industry workers participating in a frozen defined benefit plan, roughly 11 percent had a new defined benefit plan made available to them. Although this option is not common, workers in three groups--unions, large establishments, and the goods-producing industries--are given this alternative at a higher rate than other workers. Defined benefit plans tend to be more prevalent among union workers than among nonunion workers, which helps explain why private industry union workers participate in a new defined benefit pension plan at a rate that is 4 times higher than nonunion workers.6 Defined benefit plans place more of the responsibility on the employer, whereas with other retirement savings plans, the employees assume more responsibility and risk in managing their retirement funds.7

 Chart 3: Alternative defined benefit retirement plan: Percent of workers with new defined benefit plan, by worker and establishment characteristics, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008

Among part-time workers participating in a frozen defined benefit plan, a very low percentage are offered a new defined benefit plan. According to the March 2008 National Compensation Survey benefits data, only 11 percent of part-time private industry workers had access to a defined benefit plan, 14 percentage points less than full-time workers.8 Part-time workers are more commonly associated with service occupations, lower wage jobs, and small establishments, as opposed to white-collar and blue-collar occupations, higher wage jobs, and large establishments, which tend to have more full-time workers. As a way to cut cost and divert risk, employers, especially those of small establishments, may reduce the availability of defined benefit pensions to part-time employees and instead, offer an alternative.

Enhanced existing defined contribution plan. Within defined contribution plans, contributions, whether they come from the employee or the employer (or both), are added to the employee's individual account. Examples of defined contribution plans include 401(k) plans, 403(b) plans, employee stock ownership plans, and profit-sharing plans.9 Defined contribution plans require the employee to actively participate in building and maintaining their retirement savings.

As chart 4 shows, 31 percent of private industry workers affected by a defined benefit plan freeze are offered an enhanced existing defined contribution plan. Some employers may already have a defined contribution plan and can provide an incentive to those affected by a defined benefit freeze to switch to the defined contribution plan. Unlike the new defined benefit plan alternative, an enhanced existing defined contribution plan is more readily available to nonunion workers and workers within the service-providing industries.

Chart 4: Alternative defined benefit retirement plan: Percent with enhanced existing defined contribution plan by worker and establishment chartacteristics, private industry, National Compensation Survey, March 2008

New defined contribution plan. Participation in defined contribution plans has increased significantly over the years. Defined contribution plans have rapidly grown into the leading retirement savings option for private industry workers. Employers have continued to move forward with less reliance on defined benefit plans and more on defined contribution plans. Forty-three percent of private industry workers participate in a defined contribution plan, which is an increase of 8 percentage points when compared with 1992-93 data.10

Of the options that might be available to employees in frozen defined benefit plans, a new defined contribution plan was the most prevalent. As can be seen in chart 5, of the private industry workers whose defined benefit plan was frozen, 54 percent were given the option of a new defined contribution plan. This option was widespread across worker and establishment characteristics, most notably among part-time workers and in small establishments (1 to 99 workers).

Chart 5: Alternative defined benefit retirement plan: Percent of workers with new defined contribution plan, by worker and establishment characteristic, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008

For many, plan freezes have and will continue to have a major influence on how employees approach their retirement savings in the future. Although recent data from BLS show that workers affected by a freeze tend to have alternative plans made available to them, freezes in general consistently affect workers across industry and occupation. BLS will continue to track and research data regarding frozen defined benefit plans, with the intent of providing updated data annually.

 

Scott F. Curtin
Economist, Division of Compensation Data Estimation, Office of Compensation and Working Conditions, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Telephone: (202) 691-6233; E-mail: Curtin.Scott@bls.gov.

 

Notes

1 Stephen P. McCourt, “Defined Benefit and Defined Contribution Plans: A History, Market Overview and Comparative Analysis,” International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans, February 2006; available on the Internet at http://www.ifebp.org/PDF/webexclusive/06feb.pdf.

2 BLS currently collects data regarding enrollment alternatives for employees in frozen plans. Those alternatives include a new defined benefit plan, a new defined contribution plan, an enhanced existing defined contribution plan, or other. This article examines each of these alternatives except for “other.” For more information regarding other retirement plans that could be made available to employees in frozen plans, visit the Internal Revenue Service website at http://www.irs.gov/retirement/content/0,,id=111422,00.html.

3 The National Compensation Survey produces comprehensive data on the incidence (the percentage of workers with access to and participation in employer provided benefit plans) and provisions of selected employee benefit plans.

4 The Government Accountability Office conducted a study on defined benefit pension plan freezes and found that about half of all sponsors in their study population had one or more frozen defined benefit plans. Overall, about 3.3 million active participants in the study population, who represent about 21 percent of all active participants in the single-employer defined benefit system, are affected by a freeze. See Defined Benefit Pensions: Plan Freezes Affect Millions of Participants and May Pose Retirement Income Challenges, GAO-08-817 (Government Accountability Office, July 2008); available on the Internet at http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d08817.pdf.

5 An Analysis of Frozen Defined Benefit Plans (Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, December 21, 2005), p. 1; available on the Internet at http://www.pbgc.gov/docs/frozen_plans_1205.pdf.

6 NCS data show that 67 percent of Union workers chose to participate in a defined benefit plan in March 2008, considerably more than the 15 percent of nonunion workers. See National Compensation Survey: Employee Benefits in the United States, March 2008, Bulletin 2715 (Bureau of Labor Statistics, September 2008), table 2; available on the Internet at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/benefits/2008/ownership/private/table02a.pdf.

7 For more information on the various types of retirement plans, see “Retirement Plans, Benefits & Savings: Types of Retirement Plans,” on the U.S. Department of Labor website at http://www.dol.gov/dol/topic/retirement/typesofplans.htm.

8 See National Compensation Survey: Employee Benefits in the United States, March 2008, Bulletin 2715 (Bureau of Labor Statistics, September 2008), table 2; available on the Internet at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/benefits/2008/ownership/private/table02a.pdf.

9 For more information regarding types of retirement plans, see “Retirement Plans, Benefits & Savings: Types of Retirement Plans,” on the U.S. Department of Labor website at http://www.dol.gov/dol/topic/retirement/typesofplans.htm.

10 See Stephanie L. Costo, “Trends in retirement plan coverage over the last decade,” Monthly Labor Review, February 2006; available on the Internet at http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2006/02/art5full.pdf.

 

Table 1: Defined benefit retirement plan: Percent of participants in plans that have frozen benefits, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
Open plans Frozen plans

All workers

80 20
Worker characteristics

Management, professional, and related

81 19

Management, business, and financial

79 21

Professional and related

82 18

Service

80 20

Sales and office

75 25

Sales and related

61 39

Office and administrative support

80 20

Natural resources, construction, and maintenance

91 9

Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry

96 4

Installation, maintenance, and repair

86 14

Production, transportation, and material moving

79 21

Production

78 22

Transportation and material moving

81 19

Full time

81 19

Part time

75 25

Union

87 13

Nonunion

76 24
Average wage within the following percentiles (1)

Less than 10

46 54

10 to under 25

66 34

25 to under 50

78 22

50 to under 75

84 16

75 to under 90

83 17

90 or greater

80 20
Establishment characteristics

Goods-producing industries

81 19

Construction

100

Manufacturing

75 25

Service-providing industries

80 20

Trade, transportation, and utilities

71 29

Wholesale trade

79 21

Retail trade

55 45

Transportation and warehousing

82 18

Information

81 19

Financial activities

88 12

Finance and insurance

87 13

Credit intermediation and related activities

90 10

Insurance carriers and related activities

88 12

Professional and business services

84 16

Education and health services

83 17

Health care and social assistance

83 17

1 to 99 workers

85 15

1 to 49 workers

88 12

50 to 99 workers

81 19

100 workers or more

79 21

100 to 499 workers

75 25

500 workers or more

81 19
Geographic areas (2)

Metropolitan areas

80 20

Nonmetropolitan areas

84 16

New England

78 22

Middle Atlantic

84 16

East North Central

75 25

West North Central

83 17

South Atlantic

78 22

East South Central

66 34

West South Central

82 18

Pacific

88 12

Footnotes:
(1) The percentile groupings are based on the average wage for each occupation surveyed, which may include workers both above and below the threshold. The percentile values are based on the estimates published in "National Compensation Survey: Occupational Earnings in the United States, 2007."
(2) The States that comprise the census divisions are: New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont; Middle Atlantic: New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania; South Atlantic: Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia; East South Central: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Tennessee; West South Central: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas; East North Central: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin; West North Central: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota; Mountain: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; and Pacific: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington.

NOTE: A dash indicates no workers in the category or data did not meet publication criteria.



Table 2: Retirement benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
All Retirement Benefits Defined Benefits
Access Participation Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate

All workers

61 51 83 21 20 96
Worker characteristics

Management, professional, and related

76 68 90 29 28 97

Management, business, and financial

82 77 94 35 34 97

Professional and related

73 64 88 26 26 96

Service

37 25 68 9 8 95

Sales and office

65 55 84 20 19 94

Sales and related

60 46 77 15 13 89

Office and administrative support

68 60 88 23 22 96

Natural resources, construction, and maintenance

62 52 84 26 25 98

Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry

58 47 82 24 24 100

Installation, maintenance, and repair

67 58 86 28 26 95

Production, transportation, and material moving

65 54 82 26 25 96

Production

68 57 84 27 27 98

Transportation and material moving

63 51 81 25 24 94

Full time

71 60 85 25 24 96

Part time

32 23 73 11 10 90

Union

85 80 95 69 67 97

Nonunion

59 48 81 16 15 95
Average wage within the following percentiles (1)

Less than 10

25 14 57 4 4 87

10 to under 25

41 28 68 9 8 89

25 to under 50

63 50 80 16 15 95

50 to under 75

70 61 87 25 24 97

75 to under 90

79 73 91 40 38 97

90 or greater

84 78 92 39 38 96
Establishment characteristics

Goods-producing industries

71 62 86 30 29 98

Construction

55 45 83 18 18 100

Manufacturing

78 69 87 34 33 98

Service-providing industries

59 49 82 19 18 95

Trade, transportation, and utilities

67 54 81 22 20 91

Wholesale trade

76 66 87 16 16 98

Retail trade

61 46 75 17 15 88

Transportation and warehousing

73 63 86 41 36 88

Utilities

94 93 99 85 84 98

Information

78 73 94 49 48 98

Financial activities

79 73 92 42 40 97

Finance and insurance

88 82 94 50 48 97

Credit intermediation and related activities

92 87 94 56 55 98

Insurance carriers and related activities

83 77 93 45 44 96

Real estate and rental and leasing

47 39 84 11 11 98

Professional and business services

54 46 85 13 13 98

Professional and technical services

71 63 89 9 9 100

Administrative and waste services

33 24 74 10 10 99

Education and health services

64 54 84 21 20 96

Educational services

64 58 91 16 14 92

Junior colleges, colleges, and universities

85 77 91 18 16 89

Health care and social assistance

64 53 83 22 21 97

Leisure and hospitality

30 18 59 3 2 96

Accommodation and food services

29 17 57 3 3 96

Other services

40 31 79 8 8 93

1 to 99 workers

45 37 81 9 9 96

1 to 49 workers

41 34 82 8 7 96

50 to 99 workers

58 45 79 14 13 95

100 workers or more

79 67 85 35 33 96

100 to 499 workers

73 60 83 24 23 95

500 workers or more

87 76 87 47 45 96
Geographic areas (2)

Metropolitan areas

62 53 84 23 22 96

Nonmetropolitan areas

57 44 77 14 14 96

New England

56 49 87 20 19 95

Middle Atlantic

62 55 90 27 26 97

East North Central

64 56 87 26 25 96

West North Central

64 56 87 23 22 95

South Atlantic

63 50 79 18 17 95

East South Central

65 45 69

West South Central

56 45 80 17 17 96

Mountain

63 51 80 18 17 94

Pacific

58 49 83 22 21 96

Footnotes:
(1) The percentile groupings are based on the average wage for each occupation surveyed, which may include workers both above and below the threshold. The percentile values are based on the estimates published in "National Compensation Survey: Occupational Earnings in the United States, 2007."
(2) The States that comprise the census divisions are: New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont; Middle Atlantic: New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania; South Atlantic: Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia; East South Central: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Tennessee; West South Central: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas; East North Central: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin; West North Central: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota; Mountain: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; and Pacific: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington.

NOTE: A dash indicates no workers in the category or data did not meet publication criteria.



Table 3: Defined benefit frozen retirement plans: Percent of participants covered by a freeze, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
Retirement benefit accrual
All Participants Some Participants No Participants

All workers

76 3 21
Worker characteristics

Management, professional, and related

66 - -

Management, business, and financial

67 3 30

Professional and related

66 - -

Service

79 - -

Sales and office

86 3 11

Sales and related

91 1 7

Office and administrative support

82 - -

Natural resources, construction, and maintenance

66 - -

Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry

97 - -

Installation, maintenance, and repair

56 - -

Production, transportation, and material moving

74 - -

Production

71 - -

Transportation and material moving

77 - -

Full time

73 3 23

Part time

91 - -

Union

78 4 18

Nonunion

75 3 22
Average wage within the following percentiles (1)

Less than 10

85 - -

10 to under 25

93 - -

25 to under 50

81 3 16

50 to under 75

71 - -

75 to under 90

75 3 23

90 or greater

65 4 32
Establishment characteristics

Goods-producing industries

71 5 23

Manufacturing

71 5 23

Service-providing industries

77 2 21

Trade, transportation, and utilities

90 - -

Wholesale trade

80 - -

Retail trade

96 - 4

Transportation and warehousing

71 - -

Utilities

86 - -

Information

58 - -

Financial activities

57 8 35

Finance and insurance

58 8 34

Credit intermediation and related activities

63 - -

Insurance carriers and related activities

72 - -

Professional and business services

54 - -

Administrative and waste services

- - 87

Education and health services

86 - -

Educational services

91 - -

Junior colleges, colleges, and universities

91 - -

Health care and social assistance

86 - -

1 to 99 workers

74 - -

1 to 49 workers

74 - -

50 to 99 workers

74 - -

100 workers or more

76 3 21

100 to 499 workers

82 1 17

500 workers or more

71 4 25
Geographic areas (2)

Metropolitan areas

76 3 21

Nonmetropolitan areas

71 - -

New England

51 2 47

Middle Atlantic

72 (3) 28

East North Central

76 - -

West North Central

67 - -

South Atlantic

79 - -

East South Central

76 - -

West South Central

87 - -

Mountain

94 2 3

Pacific

74 - -

Footnotes:
(1) The percentile groupings are based on the average wage for each occupation surveyed, which may include workers both above and below the threshold. The percentile values are based on the estimates published in "National Compensation Survey: Occupational Earnings in the United States, 2007."
(2) The States that comprise the census divisions are: New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont; Middle Atlantic: New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania; South Atlantic: Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia; East South Central: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Tennessee; West South Central: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas; East North Central: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin; West North Central: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota; Mountain: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; and Pacific: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington.
(3) Less than 0.5 percent.

NOTE: A dash indicates no workers in the category or data did not meet publication criteria.



Table 4: Alternative defined benefit retirement plan: Percent with alternative plan by worker and establishment characteristics, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
No plan options available Plan options available Enrollment options for employees in frozen plans
New defined benefit plan Enhanced existing defined contribution plan New defined contribution plan Other

All workers

4 96 11 31 54 2
Worker characteristics

Management, professional, and related

4 96 12 38 47 1

Management, business, and financial

3 97 11 42 42 3

Professional and related

- 96 12 35 50 -

Service

- 100 - 37 55 2

Sales and office

4 96 6 33 59 2

Sales and related

3 97 - 43 51 -

Office and administrative support

5 95 9 24 64 2

Natural resources, construction, and maintenance

- 98 22 29 45 -

Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry

- 100 40 - 54 -

Installation, maintenance, and repair

- 97 16 36 43 -

Production, transportation, and material moving

- 95 19 18 57 2

Production

- 93 22 16 56 -

Transportation and material moving

- 98 - - 60 -

Full time

4 96 13 31 51 2

Part time

- 99 1 28 70 -

Union

- 98 28 12 57 3

Nonunion

4 96 7 36 53 1
Average wage within the following percentiles (1)

Less than 10

- 100 - - 58 -

10 to under 25

- 100 - 41 57 -

25 to under 50

6 94 4 27 64 2

50 to under 75

6 94 7 29 59 1

75 to under 90

3 97 28 25 43 3

90 or greater

2 98 12 37 47 4
Establishment characteristics

Goods-producing industries

5 95 19 16 57 3

Manufacturing

5 95 19 16 57 3

Service-providing industries

3 97 9 36 53 1

Trade, transportation, and utilities

- 100 9 34 55 3

Wholesale trade

- 100 46 - 40 -

Retail trade

- 100 - 47 52 -

Transportation and warehousing

- 100 - - 79 15

Utilities

- 100 63 - - -

Information

- 96 14 49 42 2

Financial activities

15 85 10 44 31 -

Finance and insurance

16 84 10 42 32 -

Credit intermediation and related activities

- 92 17 42 34 -

Insurance carriers and related activities

27 73 6 - 46 -

Professional and business services

- 100 - 67 - -

Professional and technical services

- 100 - - - -

Administrative and waste services

- 100 - 89 - -

Education and health services

- 95 - - 82 -

Educational services

- 99 - - 90 -

Junior colleges, colleges, and universities

- 99 - - 90 -

Health care and social assistance

- 95 - - 82 -

Leisure and hospitality

- 100 - - - -

Accommodation and food services

- 100 - - - -

Other services

- 100 - 100 - -

1 to 99 workers

- 100 2 38 59 -

1 to 49 workers

- 99 4 33 63 -

50 to 99 workers

- 100 - 44 55 -

100 workers or more

4 96 13 29 53 2

100 to 499 workers

4 96 6 31 58 2

500 workers or more

5 95 19 28 48 2
Geographic areas (2)

Metropolitan areas

3 97 12 31 53 2

Nonmetropolitan areas

- 90 - - 61 -

New England

- 86 - - 42 -

Middle Atlantic

- 92 10 43 - 4

East North Central

- 100 21 23 57 -

West North Central

- 98 - 38 50 4

South Atlantic

8 92 7 17 68 3

East South Central

- 100 2 - 52 -

West South Central

- 98 12 39 51 -

Mountain

- 100 - - 85 -

Pacific

1 99 - 45 40 -

Footnotes:
(1) The percentile groupings are based on the average wage for each occupation surveyed, which may include workers both above and below the threshold. The percentile values are based on the estimates published in "National Compensation Survey: Occupational Earnings in the United States, 2007."
(2) The States that comprise the census divisions are: New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont; Middle Atlantic: New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania; South Atlantic: Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia; East South Central: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, and Tennessee; West South Central: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas; East North Central: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Wisconsin; West North Central: Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota; Mountain: Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming; and Pacific: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington.

NOTE: A dash indicates no workers in the category or data did not meet publication criteria.



Data for Chart 1: Defined benefit retirement plan: Percent of participants in plans that have frozen benefits, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
Characteristic Percent

All workers

20

Full-time workers

19

Part-time workers

25

Union workers

13

Nonunion workers

24

1-99 workers

15

100 workers or more

21


Data for chart 2: Defined benefit frozen retirement plans: Percent of participants accruing benefits, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
Characteristics Percent

All participants still accruing

76

Some participants accruing

3

No participants accruing

21


Data for chart 3: Alternative defined benefit retirement plan: Percent of workers with new defined benefit plan, by worker and establishment characteristics, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
Characteristic Percent with plan alternative Percent with new defined benefit plan alternative

All workers

96 11

Full-time

96 13

Part-time

99 1

Union

98 28

Nonunion

96 7

Goods-producing

95 19

Service-providing

97 9

1-99 workers

100 2

100 workers or more

96 13


Data for chart 4: Alternative defined benefit retirement plan: Percent with enhanced existing defined contriubtion plan by worker and establishment characteristics, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2008
Characteristic Percent with plan alternative Percent with enhanced existing defined contribution plan alternative

All workers

96 31

Full-time

96 31

Part-time

99 28

Union

98 12

Nonunion

96 36

Goods-producing

95 16

Service-providing

97 36

1-99 workers

100 38

100 workers or more

96 29


Data for chart 5: Alternative defined benefit retirement plan: Percent of workers with new defined contribution plan, by worker and establishment characteristic, private industry workers, National Compensation Survey, March 2009
Characteristic Percent with plan alternative Percent with enhanced existing defined contribution plan alternative

All workers

96 54

Full-time

96 51

Part-time

99 70

Union

98 57

Nonunion

96 53

Goods-producing

95 57

Service-providing

97 53

1-99 workers

100 59

100 workers or more

96 53