Under GASB 45 accounting rules, there are many technical terms. One of these is the Annual Required Contribution (ARC). I often get questions from clients regarding the “meaning” of the ARC, so I thought that I’d give a quick and simplified explanation. Background: GASB 45 rules create a method for public employers to accrue OPEB [...]
GASB 45 covers a variety of OPEB (Other Post Employment Benefits) such as retiree medical, dental, and vision benefits. Although retiree medical insurance gets most of the attention and generally has some of the largest liabilities, dental coverage has the potential to create a significant liability too. Just as with retiree medical benefits, retiree dental [...]
Several states (Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana and Florida) have a “mandated” implicit rate subsidy. That means almost every public-sector employer in these states has an OPEB liability. Each of these states has a statute that says public employers: must allow retirees to stay in the health plan until age 65, and can’t charge them any more [...]
We’re on the last wave of compliance with GASB 45 accounting for other post-employment benefits (OPEB). The biggest calendar-year employers (Phase 1) started in 2007, midsize (Phase 2) in 2008. Now it’s 2009 audit season, when smaller employers (Phase 3) will shift from cash-basis OPEB accounting to GASB 45’s accrual basis: recognizing the cost over [...]
There’s an intriguing provision in the new health care reform law for retiree medical plans: 80% reinsurance for each early retiree’s claims between $15,000 and $90,000. The official summary is here. There’s a fixed amount of money available for this, just $5 billion. When it’s gone, it’s gone. And remember that $5 billion doesn’t go [...]
By Jim van Iwaarden
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Also posted in Early Retiree Reimbursement Program (ERRP), FAS 106, GASB 45, Public plans
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Tagged Early Retiree Reimbursement Program, early retiree reinsurance program, ERRP, GASB 45, health care reform, OPEB, retiree health, retiree medical
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