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OTHER POSTRETIREMENT BENEFIT PLANS
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2012
OTHER POSTRETIREMENT BENEFIT PLANS

9. OTHER POSTRETIREMENT BENEFIT PLANS

In addition to the Company’s pension plans, the Company also has postretirement medical and death benefits that it provides to former agents and retirees and their dependents, and a limited number of full-time employees. Benefits include hospital, major medical and a payment at death up to the retirees’ final annual salary, with certain limits. The medical plans have varying co-payments and deductibles, depending on the plan.

Generally, employees who were actively employed on December 31, 1995 became eligible with at least 15 years of service after the age of 40. Effective January 1, 1996, the Company revised these benefits so as to establish limits on future benefit payments to beneficiaries of retired participants and to restrict eligibility to then current employees. In 2009, the Company changed the postretirement medical benefits, only as they relate to current employees who still qualified for participation in the plan under the above formula. For these participants, the plan now provides for only post age 65 benefits. The population of agents receiving postretirement benefits was frozen as of December 31, 2002, when the Company ceased its distribution of proprietary life and annuity products. These plans are unfunded.

The Company has recognized the funded status of its postretirement benefit plans in its Consolidated Balance Sheet. Since these plans are unfunded, the amount recognized in the Consolidated Balance Sheet is equal to the accumulated benefit obligation of these plans. The components of accumulated other comprehensive income or loss are reflected as either a net actuarial gain or loss or a net prior service cost.

Obligation and Funded Status

The following table reflects the funded status of these plans:

 

DECEMBER 31    2012     2011  
(in millions)             

Change in benefit obligation:

    

Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation, beginning of year

   $ 46.0     $ 45.8  

Service cost

     0.1       0.1  

Interest cost

     2.1       2.4  

Net actuarial (gains) losses

     (0.2     0.4  

Benefits paid

     (2.8     (2.7

Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation, end of year

     45.2       46.0  

Fair value of plan assets, end of year

            

Funded status of plans

   $ (45.2   $ (46.0

Benefit Payments

The Company estimates that benefit payments over the next 10 years will be as follows:

 

FOR THE YEARS ENDING DECEMBER 31        
(in millions)  

2013

   $ 4.1  

2014

     3.9  

2015

     3.7  

2016

     3.5  

2017

     3.3  

2018-2022

     14.8  

The benefit payments are based on the same assumptions used to measure the Company’s benefit obligation at the end of 2013 and reflect benefits attributable to estimated future service.

 

 

 

Components of Net Periodic Postretirement (Benefit) Expense

The components of net periodic postretirement (benefit) expense were as follows:

 

FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31    2012     2011     2010  
(in millions)                   

Service cost

   $ 0.1     $ 0.1     $ 0.1  

Interest cost

     2.1       2.4       2.7  

Recognized net actuarial loss

     0.2       0.4       0.4  

Amortization of prior service cost

     (3.8     (5.3     (5.9

Net periodic postretirement benefit

   $ (1.4   $ (2.4   $ (2.7

 

The following table reflects the balances in accumulated other comprehensive income relating to the Company’s postretirement benefit plans:

 

DECEMBER 31    2012     2011  
(in millions)             

Net actuarial loss

   $ 7.2     $ 7.7  

Net prior service cost

     (7.5     (11.3
     $ (0.3   $ (3.6

The following table reflects the estimated amortization to be recognized in net periodic benefit cost in 2013:

 

Estimated Amortization in 2013    Expense (Benefit)  
(in millions)       

Net actuarial loss

   $ 0.3  

Net prior service cost

     (3.8
     $ (3.5

Assumptions

Employers are required to measure the funded status of their plans as of the date of their year-end statement of financial position. As such, the Company has utilized a measurement date of December 31, 2012 and 2011, to determine its postretirement benefit obligations, consistent with the date of its Consolidated Balance Sheets. Weighted-average discount rate assumptions used to determine postretirement benefit obligations and periodic postretirement costs are as follows:

 

FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31    2012      2011  

Postretirement benefit obligations discount rate

     4.25%         5.00%   

Postretirement benefit cost discount rate

     5.00%         5.50%   

Assumed health care cost trend rates are as follows:

 

DECEMBER 31    2012      2011  

Health care cost trend rate assumed for next year

     7.00%         7.50%   

Rate to which the cost trend is assumed to decline (ultimate trend rate)

     5.00%         5.00%   

Year the rate reaches the ultimate trend rate

     2017        2017  

A one-percentage point change in assumed health care cost trend rates in each year would have an immaterial effect on net periodic benefit cost during 2012 and accumulated postretirement benefit obligation at December 31, 2012.