How the NFL’s Blown Call Fiasco Will Boost Your Retirement Security

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OTTO GREULE JR. / GETTY IMAGES

Wide receiver Golden Tate #81 of the Seattle Seahawks makes a catch in the end zone to defeat the Green Bay Packers on a controversial call by the officials at CenturyLink Field on September 24, 2012 in Seattle, Washington.

Whether or not you give a hoot about the National Football League, by now you’ve heard of the referees’ blown call that cost the Green Bay Packers a win on Monday night. It was front-page news. Even Barack Obama and Mitt Romney weighed in.

But no one saw it the way I did—as a defining moment in the battle over all Americans’ retirement security.

What? Ok, let’s back up a bit. The bogus touchdown call occurred because NFL games were put in the hands of replacement referees, who did not have the experience or the training to consistently get the tough calls right. These replacements were on the field because team owners had locked out the regular refs as part of a labor dispute, which was settled late Wednesday night.

(MORE: Why the Referee Lockout Has to End)

The crux of that labor dispute was something most workers will understand: The league wanted to ditch its pension plan for refs and instead offer a 401(k) plan. This swap would save the owners of a $9 billion-a-year colossus about $3.3 million a year. This exact swap—defined benefits for defined contributions—has been going on in private industry for 30 years.

In 1979, 62% of all workers with an employer-sponsored retirement plan were covered by a traditional defined-benefit pension, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. Today, that figure is just 7%. Participation in 401(k) plans draws an inverse image: Just 16% of workers had one in 1979 and the rate stands at 67% today.

One can only assume that team owners, who in many cases are also private industry magnates, are intimately familiar with this profitable conversion and that they were simply seeking for their NFL franchises the same cost savings enjoyed so broadly in their other enterprises and those of the vast majority of private employers.

The pushback is what made it interesting.

A ton of data is now in hand showing that 401(k) plans have been a bust as a primary retirement security vehicle. Too many people don’t contribute enough, don’t diversify and don’t repay loans from the plans; too many take early distributions and try to time the market. Most with only a 401(k) plan have not saved anything close to what they’ll need to live for 20 or 30 years in retirement.

(MORE: The Kickstarter Economy)

The NFL refs have seen this and told the owners, No thanks. Their position was: Fund our traditional pension or keep watching as the replacements destroy your season. It was a power play rooted in the disgust that millions of workers have for their failed 401(k) plans—a disgust so broad and well understood that it’s beginning to foment change.

One huge problem with the shift to 401(k) plans is that it eliminates a source of guaranteed lifetime income. This is emerging as the retirement issue of our day. Surveys have found that retirees with a guaranteed income stream are far more confident about their finances, and happier too. Employers and policymakers alike have only begun to explore ways to restore this valuable component, and they want to do it within the 401(k) structure.

That’s why the blown call on Monday night may be a defining moment in our retirement savings crisis. The error was so big and seen by so many that, late Wednesday night, it forced the owners to cut a deal in order to get the regular refs back on the field by tonight’s game. Current refs will get to keep the traditional pensions they fought for so hard. New hires will have to accept a 401(k), which is a shame. The refs probably had the leverage to win that battle too, and further underscore all workers’ renewed appreciation for guaranteed lifetime income. But it was a win for retirement security nonetheless.

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Oil TradingAcademy
Oil TradingAcademy

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lleventon
lleventon

James Fairweather,

Another commenter who calls himself CaptainNemo9 on another (CNN) website says:

"the real problem in Greece is a national habit of tax evasion. The

gov't is spending too much, yes, but a large portion of the population

just plain doesn't pay their taxes. Bribery of tax officials (to get

personal taxes lowered) is rampant. Estimates are that 33% of tax

revenue goes uncollected and that there is a "shadow economy" of

off-the-books business that's 25% the size of the legal economy.

Capturing that revenue would bail Greece out and resolve the Euro crisis

in a heartbeat..."

Certainly there is no such thing as "a source of guaranteed lifetime income."  However, with our "old time" pension plans we had professional financial experts running these programs.  The investments were not left in the hands of the common employees whose expertise and everyday interests were not connected to the stock and bond markets around the globe.   I, like most employees in various fields, am not qualified to make the much sounder investment decisions these individuals have dedicated  their careers to making on a daily basis.   Had I tried to do so with a 401K plan instead of the union plan I do have, I would have most likely have lost at least half of my savings three years ago and not been able to have retired last year or anytime soon.

 

TikiGawd
TikiGawd

This story is over-importance at its finest. First off, salaried employees have absolutely no say in company policy as it pertains to 401k programs. If a company goes that way, their salaried employees will go that way whether they like it or not.

Just because NFL refs with seniority were able to push back on this doesn't mean most people in other industries will be able to. For one they won't have a bunch of replacement workers come in and botch things so badly in front of a viewing public that the employer will be forced to back off.

And to top it off, the author even notes how newly-hired refs will have to go on a 401k plan. Excuse me, but where is the change?

Lonnie Robinson
Lonnie Robinson

What if:—the replacement referees and the people who

reviewed the play and agreed with the erroneous call—were by design?

James Fairweather
James Fairweather

Your analysis is flawed. 401(k) plans just give the beneficiary a better idea of where the risk lies compared to a defined benefit plan.

There is no such thing as "a source of guaranteed lifetime income."  You may be promised such a benefit by your employer, but it's meaningless if the employer can't fund it when you're ready to cash in.  Employees of large companies that made such promises have gone bankrupt (e.g. Nortel) and their pensioners have had their promised benefits cut way back or even eliminated.  Even people who are promised such benefits by governments shouldn't feel secure - look what's happening in Greece now and will soon happen in many other countries that are finding they can't deliver on promises made during rosier times.

mikeconstitution
mikeconstitution

Reality, unlike the left-wing Democrat talking points fantasy of lleventon, is that pension costs are what is driving the country bankrupt.

Government workers get paid higher salaries than the taxpayers supporting them and then get to retire in their forties and fifties with ridiculously generous taxpayer funded pensions.

This is not about "greedy" capitalism, it is about greedy people stealing from taxpayers...which defines the Democrat Party, its supporters, and crony businesses like Solyndra and GM.

The solution is not to use government force and taxpayer money to impose new pensions we cannot afford, it is to refine the 401k system to minimize the mistakes people make with them; low contributions, unpaid loans, early withdrawals, and trying to time the market.

The bashing of capitalism and 401k plans is just another attempt by the left and the Democrats to grab more power and continue their unsustainable status quo of greed, debt, and wealth destruction.

They are destroying this country and its system of individual liberty and free enterprise that has lifted more people from poverty and improved more lives than any in history.

kdreed96
kdreed96

"Government workers get paid higher salaries than the taxpayers supporting them"?????  They do?  Look at any comparably EDUCATED person in the private sector, and you will find that they are paid considerably more.  Turn off the Fox "News" and check your facts.

Nonaffiliated
Nonaffiliated

One problem with defined benefit plans is that the guaranteeing company can go bankrupt.  With a 401k it's your money, you control it.   A defined benefit plan is also a problem if you want to switch companies. 

lleventon
lleventon

Not only does this blown call from replacement referees show what is wrong in America with private industries' greedy money saving 401k plans versus real 'old fashioned' pension plans that really do provide for a more comfortable retirement period for the common worker;  it exposes the same greedy, hypocritical philosophy currently at work in the public sector as well.  More and more, our elected officials, primarily coming from the right, have been steadily eroding our public servants' pension plans over the same time period.  These same right wing politicians have continuously pushed for ever lower taxes for their extremely wealthy business owner constituents who have been backing  them while by and large hiding their identities behind anonymous campaign donations.  These anonymous donors, these enormously wealthy corporate businessmen and women managed to have stolen the so-called tea party movement, and gotten their followers to clamor not for a return to the 'old fashioned' solid retirement plans they and their parents used to look forward to and enjoy, and the real, competent NFL referees want to keep, but to clamor for repealing these 'old fashioned' pension plans completely.  The thinking has been manipulated from, "Isn't it great we will be rewarded for all our hard work over our lifetime with a good pension to depend on?"  to, "If we workers in the private sector can't have any comfortable pension to look forward to in our retirement years, why should anyone in the public sector be able to keep their hard earned comfort intact in their more senior years either?"  When these hard working people fight back to keep their 'old fashioned' rights intact against this hypocritical, anonymously funded greed we wind up with replacement workers - scabs - whether it be lingerie league referees, inexperienced teachers, or any other inferior, poorly trained, if trained at all, workers.  We also wind up with a national budget deficit and crisis, by the way.

TheCynical1
TheCynical1

Wishful thinking is so much better than reality.  

Dolores Haze
Dolores Haze

My dad retired a few years ago from a govt. position as an engineer, and he has a defined benefit pension and it is, indeed, fabulous. 

The problem is that we probably can never go back to from 401Ks. The best we can hope for is reform: mandatory participation, greater employer contribution -- all mandated by law, as in Australia. Though given the current political climate here in the U.S.... sigh.