
 
 
Updated March 18, 2021
Special Financial Assistance to Multiemployer Plans
Section 9704 in Title IX, Subtitle H, of the American 
less than 40%; or (4) became insolvent after December 14, 
Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (P.L.  117-2) provides financial 
2014, and was not terminated by the date of enactment. 
assistance to certain financially troubled multiemployer 
defined benefit (DB) pension plans. 
PBGC  is authorized to issue regulations specifying that for 
two years following enactment only plans meeting certain 
Multiemployer pension plans are sponsored by more than 
conditions are able to apply for special financial assistance. 
one employer and are maintained as part of a collective 
The plans are those likely to become insolvent within five 
bargaining agreement. In DB plans, participants receive 
years of enactment, those for which PBGC would be 
regular monthly benefit payments in retirement. 
obligated to provide more than $1 billion in financial 
Multiemployer DB plans annually certify the plan’s 
assistance in the absence of any special financial assistance, 
financial status—known as the plan’s zone status. A plan 
those that have reduced benefits under MPRA, or those 
can be in endangered, seriously endangered, critical, or 
meeting other conditions as determined by PBGC. 
critical and declining status (or no category if none of these 
apply). Plans in critical status are in poor financial 
Amount of Special Finance Assistance 
condition, and plans in critical and declining status are 
The amount of special financial assistance is the amount 
expected to become insolvent within 20 years . About 10% 
needed to pay participants’ full plan benefits through the 
to 15% of multiemployer DB plan participants are currently 
2051 plan year. To determine the present value of benefits, 
in critical and declining status plans. 
the plan is to use the interest rate from its most recent zone 
certification before January 1, 2021, subject to a maximum 
When a multiemployer DB plan becomes insolvent, the 
limit.  The limit is the interest rate used by single-employer 
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) provides 
DB pension plans to discount their benefits to be paid 20 
financial assistance to the plan (in the form of loans that are 
years or more in the future (referred to as the third segment 
not expected to be repaid) to pay participants’ benefits up to 
rate in Title 26, Section 430(h)(2)(C)(iii),  of the U.S. Code) 
a statutory maximum. The federal government has no 
prior to adjustment for the smoothing corridor in the month 
obligation to provide assistance to PBGC. Prior to the 
(or preceding three months) of the application, increased by 
enactment of P.L. 117-2, PBGC  said that its multiemployer 
two percentage points. In February 2021, the third segment 
insurance program would have likely become insolvent in 
rate was 3.59%, so the limit would have been 3.59% + 
2026 and that participants in insolvent plans would have 
2.0% = 5.59%. In 2017  (the most recent year for which the 
faced large benefit reductions, likely receiving less than 
data is available), the median interest rate multiemployer 
$2,000  per year. 
plans used to value benefit obligations was 7.0%. Using 
lower interest rates results in larger amounts of financial 
Special Financial Assistance 
assistance. 
Section 9704 establishes a fund within the PBGC and 
appropriates from the general fund “such amounts as are 
The special financial assistance is to be paid to the plan as a 
necessary” to provide special financial assistance to certain 
lump sum, is to be kept separate from other plan assets, and 
multiemployer DB plans  and necessary administrative and 
must be invested only in investment grade bonds or other 
operating expenses. The special financial assistance does 
securities as determined by PBGC.  
not have to be repaid. 
Participants’ benefits in plans receiving special financial 
Eligibility for Special Financial Assistance 
assistance are not to be reduced to the PBGC maximum 
A plan can apply for special financial assistance through 
guarantee. 
December 31, 2025. A plan is eligible if it meets at least 
one of the following conditions: the plan (1) is in critical 
Conditions on Receiving Special Financial 
and declining status in any plan year from 2020 through 
Assistance 
2022; (2) had an application to suspend benefits under the 
Section 9704 of the law imposes a number of conditions on 
Multiemployer Pension Reform Act of 2014 (MPRA, 
plans that receive special financial assistance regarding, 
enacted as part of P.L. 113-235)  approved prior to the 
among other things, participants’ benefits, withdrawal 
enactment of this provision; (3) is in critical status in any 
liability, and PBGC premiums. 
year from 2020 through 2022 and has a modified funded 
percentage of less than 40% (calculated as the current value 
A plan that had previously received approval for benefit 
of plan assets divided by the present value of plan 
suspensions under MPRA is  required to (1) reinstate the 
liabilities, using a specified interest rate), and the 
benefits and (2) provide payments for benefits that 
percentage of active to inactive participants in the plan is 
participants and beneficiaries had not received because of 
the benefit suspensions. 
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Special  Financial  Assistance to Multiemployer  Plans 
PBGC  can impose reasonable conditions on plans receiving 
of benefits for financial assistance purposes is larger than 
special financial assistance relating to increases in future 
the actuarial value of these benefits. 
accrual rates, retroactive benefit improvements, allocation 
of plan assets, reductions in employer contribution rates, 
Effect on Plan Financial Position and Employer 
diversion of contributions to, and allocation of, expenses to 
Contributions 
other benefit plans, and withdrawal liability. PBGC  cannot 
It is unclear how the special financial assistance may affect 
impose conditions relating to prospective reductions in plan 
plans’ reported financial positions, employer contributions, 
benefits, changes to plan governance, or funding rules 
and withdrawal liability. (Withdrawal liability is an 
relating to receiving special financial assistance. 
employer’s share of unfunded benefits that is paid to the 
plan when the employer leaves a multiemployer DB plan.) 
Plans that receive special financial assistance are to 
The law allows PBGC to impose reasonable conditions on 
continue to pay PBGC premiums, are deemed to be in 
employer contributions and participants’ benefit levels for 
critical status through the plan year ending in 2051, and are 
plans receiving special financial assistance. Because plans 
ineligible to apply for MPRA benefit suspensions. 
are to remain in critical status through 2051, they remain 
subject to the conditions in their rehabilitation plans. 
Increase in PBGC Premiums 
PBGC  premiums for all multiemployer plans are to increase 
Greater Benefit to Certain Employers 
to $52 per participant beginning in 2031 and are to be 
Certain employers (e.g., United Parcel Service and Kroger) 
adjusted for increases in the national average wage index 
have promised to top up the benefits of some retired former 
thereafter. In 2021, multiemployer premiums are $31 and 
employees in certain plans if they are reduced as a result of 
are adjusted for increases in the national average wage 
PBGC  assistance or MPRA. Because this bill does not 
index annually.  
reduce participants’ benefits, these employers benefit 
financially by not having to make the top-up payments. 
Policy Considerations 
Some proponents view federal financial assistance to 
No Structural Changes to Plans 
multiemployer plans as fulfilling part of a promise made to 
The bill does not impose any changes to the structure of 
workers. Opponents argue that it is inappropriate to provide 
multiemployer DB plans or plan funding rules to ensure 
federal financial assistance to private sector pension plans. 
that currently financially healthy plans do not need financial 
Simulations by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) 
assistance in the future. 
indicated that an average of 185 plans will receive $86 
billion in special financial assistance and that PBGC’s 
For Further Information 
multiemployer program will remain solvent through the 
CBO Score of Ways and Means Reconciliation 
mid-2040s. CBO estimated administrative costs at $0.1 
Recommendations, https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2021-
billion. Because the special financial assistance allows 
02/hwaysandmeansreconciliation.pdf 
plans to delay or prevent insolvency, CBO estimated that 
PBGC  will spend $2 billion less in financial assistance to 
CRS Report R43305, Multiemployer Defined Benefit (DB) 
these plans. Retirees will pay $1.7 billion in federal income 
Pension Plans: A Primer 
taxes on benefits that would not have been received in the 
absence of the special financial assistance. 
CRS Report R45311, Policy Options for Multiemployer 
Defined Benefit Pension Plans 
Participants’ Benefits 
Participants in multiemployer plans that receive special 
CRS Report R46366, Single-Employer Defined Benefit 
financial assistance will not see a reduction in benefits to 
Pension Plans: Funding Relief and Modifications to 
the PBGC maximum  benefit level. Plans that became 
Funding Rules 
insolvent prior to December 14, 2014, reduced participants’ 
benefits to PBGC maximum  guarantee levels. These plans 
JCX-4-21,  Description of the Budget Reconciliation 
are ineligible for special financial assistance. 
Legislative Recommendations Relating to Pensions, 
https://www.jct.gov/publications/2021/jcx-4-21/ 
Amount of Financial Assistance 
The interest rate is an important component for determining 
John J. Topoleski, Specialist in Income Security   
the amount of financial assistance. Because the bill’s 
Elizabeth A. Myers, Analyst in Income Security  
specified interest rate limit is lower than the median interest 
rate in 2017 used by plans when calculating the value of 
IF11765
benefits for plan funding purposes, for most plans, the value 
 
 
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Special  Financial  Assistance to Multiemployer  Plans  
 
 
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https://crsreports.congress.gov | IF11765  · VERSION  3 · UPDATED