Unions, Pension Wealth, and Age-Compensation Profiles

42 Pages Posted: 5 Jul 2004 Last revised: 3 Aug 2022

See all articles by Steven G. Allen

Steven G. Allen

North Carolina State University - Poole College of Management

Robert L. Clark

North Carolina State University - Poole College of Management

Date Written: August 1985

Abstract

This paper examines the effect of unions on both the magnitude and distribution of pension benefits. Our empirical results show that beneficiaries in collectively bargained plans receive larger benefits when they retire, receive larger increases in their benefits after they retire, and retire at an earlier age than beneficiaries in other pension plans. As a result, the pension wealth of union beneficiaries is 50 to 109 percent greater than that of nonunion beneficiaries. Just as wage differentials within and across establishments are smaller among union workers, benefit differentials within and across cohorts of retirees are smaller among union beneficiaries. This results from the smaller weight given to salary average in determining initial benefits and the larger percentage increases given to those who have been retired the longest under post-retirement increases. The more compressed benefit structure under unionism causes the union-nonunion compensation (wages plus pension contributions) differential to decline more quickly than the union-nonunion wage differential over the life cycle.

Suggested Citation

Allen, Steven G. and Clark, Robert L., Unions, Pension Wealth, and Age-Compensation Profiles (August 1985). NBER Working Paper No. w1677, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=338759

Steven G. Allen (Contact Author)

North Carolina State University - Poole College of Management ( email )

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Robert L. Clark

North Carolina State University - Poole College of Management ( email )

Hillsborough Street
Raleigh, NC 27695-8614
United States
919-515-5560 (Phone)
919-515-5564 (Fax)

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