Accounting For Defined Benefit Pension Plans: Is FASB Finally Fulfilling Its 25 Year Old Promise?

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Brian W. Carpenter
Daniel P. Mahoney

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Abstract

With the September 2006 release of Statement No. 158, “Employers’ Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans,” the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) has completed the first phase of its ongoing pension accounting project.  The new standard improves the accounting for defined benefit pensions by requiring employers to report the over(under)funded status of their plans as an asset(liability) within the main body of their balance sheet. This requirement represents a significant change from previously-existing pension accounting standards, and represents a major step forward toward the goal of increased transparency in financial reporting.  This article provides a discussion of the very lengthy and controversial history of employer pension accounting, and examines the improvements that have finally resulted from Statement No. 158. Also provided is a discussion of the potential outcome of the second and final phase of the FASB’s pension accounting project

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