|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Court approves termination of United Airlines pension plans
By Patrick Martin
13 May 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
In a devastating blow to 122,000 workers and retirees, a federal
bankruptcy judge ruled May 11 that United Airlines may default
on its pension obligations and turn over control of its pension
funds to a federal agency that is already swamped by corporate
pension defaults. Judge Eugene Wedoff approved the airline managements
request to terminate four pension plansfor pilots, flight
attendants, mechanics and other ground service workers. The $9.8
billion pension plan default is the largest in US history.
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation will take over the
plans, but federal regulations limit the amount of pension payments
it can make to a maximum of about $45,000 a year. The highest
paid UAL workers, such as pilots, will face pension cuts of up
to 50 percent, while lower-paid workers could lose as much as
20 percent. The pilots face a Catch 22: under one federal law,
they are not allowed to work after age 60; under another, the
proportion of their pension guaranteed by the PBGC is sharply
reduced if they retire early, i.e., before age 65.
The actual amount the PBGC will underwrite is likely to be
even less than the $45,000 maximum, since the agencys resources
will be exhausted within a few years by a tidal wave of corporate
pension fund defaults. The initial round of defaults, notably
in the steel and airline industries, has already put the agency
$23 billion in deficit; the United default will add another $6.6
billion in pension liabilities to the PBGCs balance sheet.
United will give the agency $1.5 billion in notes and company
stock to partially offset the pension liabilities, but these securities
will be worthless in the event the airline is forced into liquidation.
The difference between the $9.8 billion United owes and the
$6.6 billion obligation assumed by the PBGC is $3.2 billion. This
staggering sum, owed to present and future retirees under the
terms of their contracts, is simply wiped out. It is the equivalent
of robbing each and every pilot, flight attendant and mechanic
of $267,000although for some younger United workers, especially
pilots, the individual loss will be far greater.
The United Airlines default marks a new stage in the financial
disintegration of the US airline industry. United itself has lost
$10 billion since 2001, and the industry as a whole has lost $30
billion. Two airlines have now defaulted on their pension obligationsUS
Airways, in February of this year, and now Unitedand many
others may follow suit. Delta Airlines warned May 11 that it could
soon be forced to file for bankruptcy. It has $3 billion in pension
payments due over the next three years.
The industry has been in perpetual crisis since it was deregulated
in the late 1970s. Bankruptcies, bitter strikes, union-busting
and the liquidation of airlines like Pan Am, Eastern Airlines
and TWA followed over the next 15 years. Since the 2001 terrorist
attacks, the industry has been in free fall, now exacerbated by
the skyrocketing price of oil, which has driven up fuel costs
by 35 percent in the past year.
A spokeswoman for United Airlines called the bankruptcy judges
decision a crucial step forward for the future of United,
as it strengthens the financial platform this company needs to
attract exit financing and compete effectively. But less
than 24 hours later, the airline was in front of Judge Wedoff
again, seeking an additional $725 million in cuts in annual labor
costs for members of the International Association of Machinists
and Aerospace Workers (IAM) and the Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal
Association (AMFA), the unions that represent ground service workers
and mechanics.
The IAM announced that 94 percent of its members have just
voted to authorize a strike. AMFA members authorized a strike
in a vote in January. Flight Attendants have also threatened to
strike against the pension fund default. These three unions and
the pilots union agreed to concession packages after Uniteds
2002 bankruptcy filing, giving back a total of $2.5 billion a
year to the company.
Wedoff has already imposed interim concessions on United workers,
in effect from January through May 31. There is little doubt he
will approve additional cuts, no doubt piously observing that
he is actually helping the workers by saving their jobs.
The airline is demanding an additional $191 million from the Air
Line Pilots Association members, $180 million from the IAM, $138
million from the Flight Attendants and $101 million from AMFA.
UAL management maintains that any strike or work disruption
is illegal under the Railway Labor Act, and last week the airline
warned that it would fire workers who participated. Judge Wedoff
ruled that canceling the pension plan was not the same thing as
canceling the contract, bolstering the airlines position.
In effect, the contract has been transformed into a completely
one-way agreement, a form of indentured servitude: workers are
legally obliged to work, but the company is not legally obliged
to pay the wages and benefits it previously agreed to. No airline
union has every struck a carrier while it was in bankruptcy.
A strike against such conditions is absolutely justified. But
such a struggle can only advance the interests of UAL workers
if they break out of the organizational and political straitjacket
imposed on them by the union leaders. They must reject the perspective
of equality of sacrifice and appeals to the federal
government and the Bush administration.
There can be no equality between airline workers and corporate
CEOs like Uniteds Glen Tiltonwhose $4.5 million annual
pension is guaranteed by his employment contract with the company,
even while the pensions of pilots, mechanics and flight attendants
are shredded. As for the Bush administration, it is the sworn
enemy of the airline workers, the principal instrument of corporate
America in its war against the working class.
It was the federal Air Transportation Stabilization Board,
set up after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, which
directly instigated the current crisis at United. Last summer,
the board denied Uniteds request for a federal loan guarantee.
The three-member panel, all appointed by Bush, indicated that
United had done far too little to cut the pay and benefits of
its workforce.
Airline workers are facing not merely the rapacity of a single
industry, but a systematic assault on the wages, pensions, healthcare
benefits and working conditions of the entire working class. The
airline bosses are setting the pace of an onslaught by corporate
America as a whole, which has vast implications for all working
people.
Tens of millions of workers once relied on a combination of
company-paid pension plans and Social Security to ensure a dignified
retirement. Less than a third of workers are now covered by such
pension plans, and even those that are face the increasing likelihood
that their corporate employers, after exploiting their lifetime
of labor, will not make good on their promises.
After the airline industry, the next big corporate pension
default is likely to be in the auto industry, where nearly 1 million
workers and retirees depend on pension plans underwritten by General
Motors, Ford and DaimlerChrysler. Two of the three had their debt
ratings reduced to junk bond status last week, with underfunded
pension obligations cited as the most important reason.
Overall, according to a June 2004 report by the PBGC, the number
of underfunded pension plans has risen from 166 in 1999 to 1,050
in 2003, with a total shortfall of $279 billion.
The destruction of the United Airlines workers pensions
demonstrates the real purpose of Bushs campaign for Social
Security reform. United is proposing to replace its
pension plan, which provides a contractually guaranteed benefit
for every retired worker, with a 401k plan paid for by the workers
themselves from their own paychecks, with benefits conditioned
on the performance of the stock and money markets.
This is precisely what Bush is proposing for Social Security
as a whole: replacing the benefits guaranteed by the federal program
with private retirement accounts at the mercy of Wall Street,
and guaranteeing nothing. Bush aims to do to the entire American
working class what Glen Tilton & Co. are doing to the United
Airlines workers: sweep aside their retirement security and make
them pay for the crisis of the profit system.
The struggle of the airline workers is therefore connected
necessarily with a fight to mobilize the entire working class
as an independent political force, against big business as a whole,
and against the two political parties which represent the corporate
elite, the Democrats as well as the Republicans.
The jobs and living standards of airline workers, as well as
the safety and comfort of the traveling public, can only be secured
by ending the subordination of the airlines and all major industry
to the workings of the capitalist market.
As an operating principle, the goal of private profit has proven
itself utterly irrational and destructive. A rational solution
to the crisis requires the building of an independent and international
socialist movement that has as its aim the complete reorganization
of the economy. The airlines should be transformed into public
utilities, run on an international basis, and placed under the
democratic control of the working people.
Only on this basis can the jobs, wages, working conditions
and retirement benefits of airline workers be secured, and the
interests of society as a whole be defended.
See Also:
Crisis in the US airlines
industry: the case for public ownership
[11 October 2004]
United Airlines
announces deferment on pension payments
Major airlines continue assault on US workers
[20 July 2004]
United Airlines bankruptcy
signals new attacks on US workers
US Airways and American seek millions in concessions
[11 December 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |