DEFINED BENEFIT PENSION PLANS
Employers who do not require absolute discretion when determining the amount of their annual retirement plan contribution often establish Defined Benefit Plans. Typically, this is an employer whose annual profit picture does not fluctuate and therefore can commit to an annual requried contribution. The contributions are then invested in the plan's trust account and used to pay benefits to participants at retirement, death, disability, or termination of employment. The Defined Benefit plan is designed to pay a fixed benefit upon retirement. The benefit is based on the formula outlined in the plan document. The contributions are actuarially determined on the anticipated benefit at retirement. The factors that determine the total contribution are: Participants' compensation; trust account earnings; participants' ages; and years of service. The plan sponsor bears investment risk because plan benefits don't depend on contributions or investment results. If the assets fail to earn the rate of return used as the actuarial assumption, a greater contribution may be reuqired the following year. Or, conversely, if the investments outperson expectations, the plan will have an actuarial gain, which may reduce future contribution requirements.