Common Credit Units, and Projected Unit Cost of Credit Methods
Keywords:
Pension funds, traditional credit units, projected salary scale, total actuarial liabilities, and total normal costsAbstract
Pension funds are funds collected by the company as the rights of a retiree from the company. Pension funds are usually in the form of money that can be taken every month or taken all at once when someone enters retirement, and the amount of pension funds must be calculated carefully. This paper aims to be able to perform actuarial calculations on traditional credit units, and perform calculations on several methods of calculating the projected salary scale. The calculation results obtained total actuarial liabilities, and total normal costs for pension fund program participants, so that it can be used as an illustration for pension plan participants to estimate how much pension benefits will be received at retirement.References
Angkasa, A. P., Lestari, D., & Devila, S. (2021, July). Comparison of entry age normal and projected unit credit method for funding of defined benefit pension plan. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 2374, No. 1, p. 030003). AIP Publishing LLC.
Chen, K., & Hardy, M. R. (2009). The DB underpin hybrid pension plan: fair valuation and funding. North American Actuarial Journal, 13(4), 407-424.
Gold, J. (2005). Accounting/actuarial bias enables equity investment by defined benefit pension plans. North American Actuarial Journal, 9(3), 1-21.
Gold, J., & Latter, G. (2009). The case for marking public plan liabilities to market. The future of public employee retirement systems, 29-57.
Hardy, M. R., Saunders, D., & Zhu, X. (2014). Market-consistent valuation and funding of cash balance pensions. North American Actuarial Journal, 18(2), 294-314.
Liu, M., Calvo, R. A., & Rus, V. (2012). G-Asks: An intelligent automatic question generation system for academic writing support. Dialogue & Discourse, 3(2), 101-124.
Pang, G., & Warshawsky, M. (2013). Comparing Costs and Risks of Retirement Plans for Sponsors. Risk Management and Insurance Review, 16(2), 195-217.
Peng, J. (2004). State and Local Public Pension Fund Management. Public Administration and Public Policy, 271.
Valsiner, J., Bibace, R., & LaPushin, T. (2005). What happens when a researcher asks a question. Science and medicine in dialogue: Thinking through particulars and universals, 275-288.
Zwaan, R. A., & Taylor, L. J. (2006). Seeing, acting, understanding: motor resonance in language comprehension. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 135(1), 1.
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
With the receipt of the article by Editorial Board of the Operations Research: International Conference Series (ORICS) and it was decided to be published, then the copyright regarding the article will be diverted to ORICS
Operations Research: International Conference Series (ORICS) hold the copyright regarding all the published articles and has the right to multiply and distribute the article under Creative Commons Atribusi 4.0 Internasional.Â
Copyright tranfer statement the author to the journal is done through filling out the copyright transfer form by author. The form can be downloaded HERE.Â