EFR said:
If it is that much overfunded it is actually financially irresponsible to just leave all that money sitting there. Financially the most responsible thing to do is make sure the pension is funded right at 100%, that way you don't have extra $$ locked up for no reason. That being said, I am sure they will somehow mess this up and somehow destabilize the pension AND waste the money they took.
You don't understand how pensions are funded, or secured and what a reduction to 100% could do.
Idk anything about their specific arrangements, but I had to sit through an exhausting seminar for one a while ago.
It is funded through investment earnings, & employer/employee contributions generated from tax revenue.
If the market takes a dive, asset values decrease, tax revenue decreases etc. The pension is hit on multiple fronts.
They use something I'm not that familiar with called 'actuarial smoothing' to spread losses out over a few years, but I don't know much about that, and don't care to research it.
If you fund at 100%, or precisely what is needed, there is zero buffer. That is a terrible idea.
Furthermore setting this as a precedent is a terrible idea, and can pave the way for even more nefarious actions.