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Optimal Financial Strategies for Trusteed Pension Plans

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 1974 9(3), 357
Since the Second World War the corporate pension trust has become a prominent method of provision for employees' retirement income. The continuing liberalization of pension provisions and pressures to match pension trust liabilities with assets has established pension contributions as a significant component of corporate cash outlays. Asset accumulation in pension trusts has rendered such institutions a major source of capital funds.

Plasm: Pension Liability and Asset Simulation Model: Discussion

Journal of Finance 1982 37(2), 606
Irwin Tepper, Plasm: Pension Liability and Asset Simulation Model: Discussion, The Journal of Finance, Vol. 37, No. 2, Papers and Proceedings of the Fortieth Annual Meeting of the American Finance Association, Washington, D.C., December 28-30, 1981 (May, 1982), pp. 606-607

Taxation and Corporate Pension Policy

Journal of Finance 1981 36(1), 1-13 open access
ABSTRACT This paper focuses on the impact of taxes on optimal corporate pension policy. The analysis is based upon an integration of corporate and individual shareholder considerations. The major conclusions are that a company should fully fund its pension plan and should invest the pension fund totally in bonds.

Taxation and Corporate Pension Policy

Journal of Finance 1981
As a result of rapid growth in the post—war period, pension plans have become a major component of the financial structure of large corporations. A recent survey [5] of 475 of the Fortune 500 companies revealed that pension cost in 1978 averaged 12.5 % of pretax profits and 7.2 % of