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How Cuts in Retiree Benefits
Fatten Companies' Bottom Lines 

Trimming a Health-Care Plan

Creates Accounting Gains,
Under Some Arcane Rules

A Shield Against Rising Costs
By ELLEN E. SCHULTZ and THEO FRANCIS
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


The loud message comes from one company after another: Surging
health-care costs for retired workers are creating a giant burden. So
companies have been cutting health benefits for their retirees or
requiring them to contribute more of the cost.


Time for a reality check: In fact, no matter how high health-care costs
go, well over half of large American corporations face only limited
impact from the increases when it comes to their retirees. They have
established ceilings on how much they will ever spend per retiree for
health care. If health costs go above the caps, it's the retiree, not the
company, who's responsible.Whirlpool Corp. picked up $13.5 million in
earnings, or 19 cents a share, in last year's second quarter from
accounting gains, after imposing both caps and cuts in health care for
its retirees. This gain more than offset charges of 16 cents a share
primarily for a recall of microwave-oven products. Whirlpool then just
beat consensus estimates of $1.31 in second-quarter earnings. Whirlpool
confirms the information but says it didn't cut retiree benefits to help
it meet earnings targets. 

Cuts Redux 

Gradually, the pools of accounting gains generated by early rounds of
benefit cuts and caps run out. When that happens, companies sometimes cut
further, replenishing the pool. 

International Paper Co. capped its spending soon after it adopted the
retiree health-care liability required by the accounting rule, Financial
Accounting Standard 106, in 1991. This cap reversed much of the
liability. It generated a pool of accounting gains that trickled into the
company's financial statements -- to the tune of $17.7 million a year --
until 2000. 

Then the stockpile was used up. International Paper again cut benefits in
2000, 2001 and 2002, primarily by capping the benefits of retirees of
newly acquired companies. This generated a new batch of accounting gains.
They have added a total of $65 million to International Paper's income so
far. 

A company spokeswoman confirms the figures, noting that they reflect
standard accounting practices. She says the company "simply made plan
design changes as part of our focus on controlling our costs while
maintaining a competitive benefits program." 

New Formulas 

When a company's liability for retiree health care soars, it's usually
just because of some change in the assumptions that went into the
liability formula -- a change the company itself made. 

Most commonly, it involves interest rates. Liability calculations assume
a particular rate at which the assets used to pay benefits will grow. A
lower rate leads to a higher liability. Think of it this way: If the
return on the money you set aside for an obligation is going to be lower,
you have to set more money aside. 

For instance, UAL Corp.'s liability for retirees' health care surged more
than $1 billion in 2002. Reason: The airline had lowered the rate used in
its liability calculation -- known as the discount rate -- to 6.75% from
7.50%. Companies have considerable latitude in picking the interest rate
they use and deciding when to make a change, though rates were certainly
declining when UAL made its change. 

A shift could be in store. If interest rates rise from current historic
lows, billions of dollars in corporate liabilities for retiree health
care will vanish. 

Also feeding into this murky mix is a company's estimate of health-cost
inflation. As with the interest rate, companies have wide leeway to
change their assumptions about health-cost trends -- giving their
liability figure either a bump up or a push down. For example, in 2002,
Motorola Inc. boosted its assumption of annual health-care inflation to
12% from 6%. This was a key reason its liability for retiree health care
jumped by $122 million. 

Rather than focusing on health-care liability, which companies have so
much latitude to adjust, shareholders might want to look at what a
company actually spends year-to-year for retiree medical benefits. At
Bank of America Corp., for example, the liability for retiree health
benefits rose by $69 million, to $1.1 billion, in 2003. But federal
filings show that what the bank actually spent for these benefits in 2003
declined to $63 million from $84 million the year before, a 25% drop.
Retirees' portion rose 27% to $62 million. 

Contrary to conventional wisdom, it isn't uncommon for companies to
report declines in their actual spending on retiree health care. Those
whose filings reveal lower "benefits paid" last year include Altria Group
Inc. (down 5%, to $246 million); R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings Inc.
(down 11%, to $63 million); Clorox Co. (a 33% fall, to $4 million); Ball
Corp. (down 21%, to $8 million), and Black & Decker Corp. (down 28%, to
$13 million). 

This "benefits paid" figure still doesn't tell whether a company is
spending more or less per retiree. The total might be up simply because
there were more retirees, perhaps because the company had layoffs or did
an acquisition. 

But it's still a better measure of the burden of health care than one
other number that companies report: their "expense" for retirees' health
care. This is essentially an accounting measure of how much a benefit
plan pushes corporate income up or down, driven largely by changes in
liability. 

Dropout Roulette 

When employers cap or cut retiree medical programs, the companies don't
benefit just by spending less and reaping accounting gains. They also can
benefit from a spiral of dropouts. 

As retirees see their out-of-pocket costs rising, some of the healthier
retirees quit the company program. Their good health lets them buy
cheaper coverage elsewhere. But their departures concentrate the
remaining pool with sicker people, costs go up, more dropouts ensue, and
the pool gets more concentrated again, in what the industry sometimes
calls a death spiral. 

Each dropout reduces a company's immediate outlays, since it no longer
has to pay even a capped benefit for that person. Dropouts also generate
accounting gains for the company, since the concern gets to reverse the
liability it had booked for covering those retirees for life. 

A company in this situation -- with its own expenses capped -- has little
incentive to negotiate the lowest possible prices with medical providers.
In fact, it has an incentive not to: Rising expenses not only won't hurt
the company but will tend to drive more retirees from the program. 

At Sears Roebuck & Co., thousands of retirees have dropped out of a
retiree health-benefit plan in recent years, at a time when retirees'
share of costs was going up. While no one is saying Sears sought this
dropout spiral, the dropouts follow a series of caps Sears established in
the 1990s to limit its own expenses. The number of retirees taking part
in its health plan has fallen 18% since 2000, to 51,500. Sears has
115,000 retirees in all. It can't say how many are eligible. 

Sears says that while cost may prompt some retirees to drop out of the
health plan, a more significant factor is that older retirees are dying
and fewer people are eligible. Benefits Vice President Liz Rossman says
Sears works hard to keep its plan affordable for retirees. 

Sears has fed $383 million into earnings since 1997 from accounting gains
that arose when the company capped its spending and retirees dropped the
increasingly costly coverage. 

In January, Sears announced it was further tightening the cap on its
spending on retirees' health care, and also eliminating future retiree
health benefits for most current employees. Sears says the steps will
make it more competitive but declines to say how much they will generate
in accounting gains. 

What makes such moves different from other accounting quirks is that
retirees end up paying the price. In Jeannette, Pa., in early January,
about 100 retirees of GenCorp Inc., formerly called General Tire &
Rubber, met in a union hall to discuss the latest rise in their
health-care premiums. The new cost of coverage for a couple was $568 a
month. For most, this exceeded their company pensions. Because of the
higher cost, many of the retirees at the meeting, whose ages hovered
around 80, said they were dropping their employer's coverage. 

Mabel Kramer began working at the company in 1944 making gas masks for
World War II soldiers, and met her husband there. Now a widow, she
collects a pension of $179 a month based on his 34 years with the
company. Her GenCorp retiree medical benefits cost her $284 a month,
consuming the pension and part of her $810 Social Security check. "If
they raise it any more, I'll drop it," says Mrs. Kramer, 78. "It's enough
to make you sick." 

Others don't dare drop it. Edward Peksa, who spent 24 years in GenCorp's
tennis-ball department, said he needs the coverage to help pay for five
drugs his wife, Anna, takes for arthritis, hypertension and thyroid and
cholesterol problems. The couple's premium more than erases his GenCorp
pension of $320 a month. To make ends meet, Mr. Peksa, 75, works 30 hours
a week as a greeter at Wal-Mart Stores. 

These retirees were paying nothing for their health-care coverage until
2000, when the company began charging them. Their premiums have risen
steadily since then. GenCorp says the reason is the ceilings it placed in
1995 and 1997 on its own spending on retirees' health care. 

GenCorp's spending on the retiree health-care benefit has fallen over the
past six years, its filings to the Securities and Exchange Commission
show. It paid $30 million for the benefit in 1997 but just $25 million in
2003, according to its annual report. The liability on its books for
retiree health care is down 40% since 1995. 

Among the reasons is that no one hired since the mid-1990s will get the
retiree benefit, GenCorp says. It adds that the liability also shrinks as
retirees die or drop out of the health-care plan because they have "other
options or coverage available, or possibly because they can't afford it
any more." 

Medicare Checks  TRICKLE-DOWN EFFECT



Companies often reap accounting gains, and therefore earnings, when they
cut retirees' health-care benefits or cap their own spending on these
benefits. Here are the steps as taken at International Paper Co.

1991

Records $405 million balance-sheet liability at year-end for then-current
program of health coverage for retirees.

1992

Caps what company will pay per retiree per year in the future. This step
reduces the obligation and creates a $133 million pool of accounting
gains that will trickle into income over time. Company adds $18 million
of this to 1992 income.

1993-1999


Adds $17.7 million from this pool of gains to earnings each year,
exhausting the pool.

2000-2002

Makes various benefit changes, including imposing caps for plans at newly
acquired companies, thus reducing liability again and replenishing pool
of accounting gains.

2000-2003

Adds $65 million to earnings from new pool.
  
  
Medicare's new prescription-drug benefit is giving companies a whole new
source of accounting-generated income that boosts their earnings. 
And some employers may get federal subsidies even after transferring
costs to their retirees. 

Congress was worried that if Medicare paid for prescription drugs,
companies would cut retiree health-care benefits even faster than they
already were. So when it passed a Medicare drug benefit last year,
Congress added subsidies for companies that retain retiree drug coverage.
The U.S. will reimburse employers for 28% of the cost of retiree
prescription-drug spending over $250, up to a subsidy of $1,330 per
retiree per year. 

This means companies can reduce the liability they're carrying on their
books for drug coverage. They won't get the subsidy until 2006. But
accounting rules let them estimate how big a subsidy they'll get over the
lives of current and future retirees and deduct this figure from their
liability right now -- and start dropping immediate accounting gains to
their bottom lines. 

General Motors Corp. estimates the Medicare prescription-drug plan will
cut $4 billion from its liability for retiree health care. Other
companies' estimated cuts include $1.3 billion at Verizon Communications
Inc., $572 million at BellSouth Corp., $415 million at AMR Corp., $450
million at U.S. Steel Corp., and $280 million at UAL. All of these will
boost the companies' income. 

The new Medicare law means some companies can get federal subsidies (and
thus fresh accounting gains and earnings) even if they shift part of the
cost of their retiree drug coverage to the retirees themselves. That's
because the way the law is written, the subsidy is based on the whole
cost of a company's retiree drug program -- including the part retirees
have to pay for. 

Write to Ellen E. Schultz at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and Theo Francis at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Updated March 16, 2004 

Yet numerous companies are cutting retirees' health benefits anyway. One
possible factor: When companies cut these benefits, they create instant
income. This isn't just the savings that come from not spending as much.
Rather, thanks to complex accounting rules, the very act of cutting
retirees' future health-care benefits lets companies reduce a liability
and generate an immediate accounting gain.

In some cases it flows straight to the bottom line. More often it sits on
the books like a cookie jar, from which a company takes a piece each year
that helps it meet its earnings targets.

The art of minimizing retiree-benefit costs while creating income is
arcane and poorly understood by the public -- and by the retirees. Here's
a field guide to seven techniques.

Hitting the Ceiling

Big companies began in the early 1990s to set ceilings on how much they
would ever spend for retiree health care, regardless of what happened to
medical costs in general. ConocoPhillips, Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola
Enterprises Inc. are among the many that did so. A cap can be a fixed
annual amount per retiree, a per-retiree average or, less commonly, a
fixed sum for a group. In any case, once it's reached, a company is
largely insulated from future medical-cost increases for those retirees.


The fate of retirees can be very different. When Robert Eggleston retired
from International Business Machines Corp. 12 years ago, he was paying
$40 a month toward health-care premiums for himself and his wife, LaRue,
with IBM paying the rest. In 1993, IBM set ceilings on its own
health-care spending for retirees. For those on Medicare, which provides
basic hospital and doctor-visit coverage, the cap was $3,000 or $3,500,
depending on when they retired. For those younger than 65, the cap was
$7,000 or $7,500. Spending hit the caps for the older retirees in 2001,
the company says, pushing future health-cost increases onto retirees'
shoulders.

Mr. Eggleston, 66 years old, has seen his premiums jump more to $365 a
month for the couple. Deductibles and copayments for drugs and doctor
visits added $663 a month last year. "It just eats up all the pension,"
which is $850 a month, Mrs. Eggleston says. Her husband has brain cancer.
Though he gets free supplies of a tumor-fighting drug through a program
for low-income families, he has cashed in his 401(k) account, and he and
LaRue have taken out a second mortgage on their Lake Dallas, Texas, home.

IBM retirees as a group saw their health-care premiums rise nearly 29% in
2003, on the heels of a 67%-plus increase in 2002. For IBM, with its caps
in place, spending on retiree health care declined nearly 5%, after a
drop of 18% the year before.

IBM confirms that retirees' spending has risen as its own has fallen. It
describes the retirees' increased cost in 2003 as not very dramatic,
averaging $158 a year, or $13.15 a month, for each of the 190,000
retirees and dependents who participate in the plan. IBM says its costs
are down because more retirees are older and eligible for Medicare, so
the company's contribution is lower. It says that this year it
established a "zero premium" plan for retirees, although this plan
carries deductibles double those of other plans.

Caps Plus Cuts

Just because companies have shelter from retiree health-cost inflation
doesn't mean they can't also cut their retirees' health benefits.

In January last year, Aetna

Inc. said it would phase out health-care benefits for workers who retire
starting this year. "Health-care costs have increased," says a spokesman
for the company. Yet federal filings show Aetna's spending on its
retirees' health benefits had not been rising substantially, thanks to
ceilings Aetna imposed a decade ago. From 1998 through 2002, its annual
spending for retiree health benefits ranged between $35 million and $39
million.

Aetna says it made the January 2002 benefit cut to strengthen its
business. "Wherever it makes sense, we've been trying to reduce expenses
in order to be competitive," says its spokesman, adding that Aetna's
overall benefits remain "very competitive." Aetna recorded losses early
this decade but has turned around, reporting fourth-quarter profits
double those of a year earlier.

Aetna's spending on health benefits for 12,000 retirees did rise the
following year, 2003, to $44.2 million. A company spokesman said it was
unclear why.

Profits From Cuts

For many big U.S. companies, cutting benefits doesn't merely relieve them
of future spending. More important, though less visible, is the instant
income the cuts can create. It's all because of an accounting rule
adopted nearly 14 years ago.

The rule said an employer that provided a retiree health benefit had to
estimate what it would cost to pay that benefit over the lives of the
retirees. The total became a liability. It created a big obligation on
the balance sheet. But at a time when legions of companies were taking
this hit, it was generally ignored by securities analysts. There was even
some advantage to putting a jaw-dropping obligation on the books:
Employers could point to it as a reason that, to survive, they needed to
slash benefit levels.

But when a company now changes one of the assumptions that went into that
liability, it gets to reduce the liability. In accounting, reducing a
liability generates a gain. Voil�: income.

As an accounting credit, this isn't money that can be spent. But it looks
the same in the bottom line -- which affects the stock and often
management's pay incentives.

Just setting a spending cap typically brings an accounting gain, because
it reduces the amount the company expects to pay out over time for the
benefits. A company that goes further and cuts the benefit structure
reaps more paper gains. It may sound strange that a company can get
income from cutting benefits it hasn't paid and may never pay, but that's
how it works.


These sums can bump earnings up significantly. Caterpillar Inc. in 2002
added $75 million to income -- 9.4% of pretax earnings -- with the
accounting gain it got from boosting the health-care premiums its
retirees had to pay and making other changes to retiree benefits. The
move will lift pretax earnings about $45 million a year for several more
years. Caterpillar confirms the information but says it didn't cut
benefits to boost earnings; rather, it did it to help retirees -- by
keeping the plan more affordable for the company. "The best way to
protect the health care for the long term was to make some of these
changes now," says a spokeswoman.
 


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Shrub 04:
Don't Switch Horsemen Mid-Apocalypse
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