From the Journal  Star.com:
The rapidly deteriorating financial health  of the federal agency that guarantees 44 million Americans' pensions  is raising alarms in Congress.
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. deficit  was $33.5 billion in the red at the end of March, triple its deficit  six months earlier.
The recession threatens to add to the  strain on the corporation by pushing more companies into bankruptcy  and leaving the struggling agency responsible for their pensions.
 
For example, the agency faces a potential  tidal wave of claims from Chrysler and General Motors, whose pension  plans are underfunded by an estimated $29 billion, the Government Accountability  Office said.
If the PBGC’s condition continues to  deteriorate, the government could come under pressure to shore it up  with taxpayer funds, the GAO said in testimony to the Senate’s Special  Committee on Aging.
“The Committee has grave concerns about  the agency’s viability,” said Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., the committee’s  chairman.
The agency does not insure 401(k) plans,  but its fate is important not only to the workers covered by more than  29,000 employer-sponsored benefit pension plans but to all taxpayers  who could be asked to foot the bill on a bailout if the agency ever  becomes insolvent.
Despite the deficit, the PBGC will be  able to meet its obligations to pensioners for many years, acting PBGC  director Vincent Snowbarger told the panel. That’s because the payments  it owes are not due all at once; they are spread over the beneficiaries’  lifetimes, Snowbarger explained.
Finances aside, the GAO is concerned  that the PBGC could have trouble simply handling the added work. The  agency suffers from weaknesses in its management and governance, the  GAO’s Barbara Bovbjerg, who oversees workforce and income security  issues, said in a statement to the committee.
A recent report by the agency’s inspector  general alleged that Charles Millard, a former PBGC director, had improper  contacts with big Wall Street firms while they were bidding on contracts  to help manage PBGC investments. Millard allegedly asked an executive  at the financial firm BlackRock how to tailor a contract requirement  to winnow the field of bidders. In addition, he allegedly received help  with a job search from an executive at another bidder, Goldman Sachs.
 
Kohl and the agency’s acting director  recommended that the contracts, worth a total of $100 million, be canceled.
 
Millard, who served under President George  W. Bush, declined to answer questions at a hearing last week, invoking  his Fifth Amendment right not to give testimony that might incriminate  himself.
Millard previously asserted that he complied  with all legal and ethical obligations. “I acted in what I believed  to be the best interests of the PBGC to implement desperately needed  reforms of PBGC investment policy,” Millard said in a letter to the  inspector general.
