Woods J R
Office of Research and Statistics, Social Security Administration.
Soc Secur Bull. 1989 Oct;52(10):2-19.
Based on data for private wage and salary workers in May 1988, this article examined pension coverage under two types of employer-sponsored pension plans. Some of the factors associated with employer-financed pension coverage were also examined, and comparisons were made to findings on pension coverage of full-time workers in 1972, 1979, and 1983. "Covered" workers were defined as those actually participating in a pension plan. Among all private sector employees studied, 34 percent were covered by a "basic" pension plan (most of which, presumably, were defined benefit plans), and 14 percent were covered by a pretax retirement savings plan--a subtype of defined contribution plan. With 7 percent of the respondents covered by both types of plans, the total coverage rate under employer-sponsored plans was 41 percent. Twelve percent of the respondents reported that they had contributed to an IRA in 1987. The reported IRA usage was somewhat higher among those already covered by a pension plan than among noncovered workers. Six percent of the respondents were not covered by an employer-sponsored plan but were contributing to an IRA, yielding a total of 47 percent who were participating in either an employer-sponsored or an individual retirement plan. While it was assumed--as in previous studies--that all "basic" coverage was being funded by employers, only four-fifths of those in pretax retirement savings plans reported that employers were also contributing to these plans. The remainder of the analysis was restricted to coverage under employer-financed plans, and it was further restricted to full-time workers. A total of 46 percent of these workers were covered under employer-financed pension plans--33 percent covered only by a basic plan, 7 percent covered only by a pretax plan, and 6 percent dually covered. Among men, the coverage rate was 49 percent, compared with 43 percent among women. Several individual and job-related characteristics were found to be associated with employer-financed pension coverage among full-time employees. Coverage rates were quite low among workers under age 25, but were substantially higher among those aged 35-59. Pension coverage was also low among those with less than 5 years of employment on the job, but relatively high among those with 5 years or more of job tenure. Coverage rate differences by race were not substantial. Whites reported a coverage rate of 47 percent, compared with 42 percent among blacks and 45 percent among other races.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
基于1988年5月私营部门工资和薪金工人的数据,本文研究了两种雇主赞助的养老金计划下的养老金覆盖情况。还研究了与雇主资助的养老金覆盖相关的一些因素,并与1972年、1979年和1983年全职工人养老金覆盖情况的研究结果进行了比较。“参保”工人被定义为实际参加养老金计划的人。在所有接受研究的私营部门雇员中,34%的人参加了“基本”养老金计划(据推测,其中大部分是固定收益计划),14%的人参加了税前退休储蓄计划——一种固定缴款计划的子类型。由于7%的受访者同时参加了这两种计划,雇主赞助计划下的总覆盖率为41%。12%的受访者报告称,他们在1987年向个人退休账户(IRA)缴款。在已经参加养老金计划的人中,报告的IRA使用率略高于未参保工人。6%的受访者没有参加雇主赞助的计划,但正在向IRA缴款,因此共有47%的人参加了雇主赞助的计划或个人退休计划。与之前的研究一样,虽然假定所有“基本”覆盖都由雇主提供资金,但在税前退休储蓄计划中,只有五分之四的人报告称雇主也在为这些计划缴款。其余分析仅限于雇主资助计划下的覆盖情况,并且进一步仅限于全职工人。这些工人中共有46%参加了雇主资助的养老金计划——33%仅参加基本计划,7%仅参加税前计划,6%同时参加两种计划。男性的覆盖率为49%,女性为43%。研究发现,一些个人和与工作相关的特征与全职雇员的雇主资助养老金覆盖情况有关。25岁以下的工人覆盖率相当低,但35至59岁的工人覆盖率则高得多。工作年限不到5年的人养老金覆盖率也很低,但工作年限5年或更长的人覆盖率相对较高。不同种族之间的覆盖率差异不大。白人报告的覆盖率为47%,黑人为42%,其他种族为45%。(摘要截选至400字)