In: Accounting
Beale Management has a noncontributory, defined benefit pension
plan. On December 31, 2018 (the end of Beale's fiscal year), the
following pension-related data were available:
Projected Benefit Obligation | ($ in millions) | ||||
Balance, January 1, 2018 | $ | 400 | |||
Service cost | 42 | ||||
Interest cost, discount rate, 5% | 20 | ||||
Gain due to changes in actuarial assumptions in 2018 | (11 | ) | |||
Pension benefits paid | (20 | ) | |||
Balance, December 31, 2018 | $ | 431 | |||
Plan Assets | ($ in millions) | ||||
Balance, January 1, 2018 | $ | 420 | |||
Actual return on plan assets | 30 | ||||
(Expected return on plan assets, $35) | |||||
Cash contributions | 71 | ||||
Pension benefits paid | (20 | ) | |||
Balance, December 31, 2018 | $ | 501 | |||
January 1, 2018, balances: | ($ in millions) | ||
Pension asset | $ | 20 | |
Prior service cost–AOCI (amortization $4 per year) | 28 | ||
Net gain–AOCI (any amortization over 10 years) | 82 | ||
Required:
1. to 3. Prepare the 2018 journal entry to record
pension expense, to record any 2018 gains and losses and the
contribution to plan assets and benefit payments to retirees.
4. Determine the balances at December 31, 2018, in
the PBO, plan assets, the net gain–AOCI, and prior service
cost–AOCI [Hint: You might find T-accounts useful.]
5. What amount will Beale report in its 2018
balance sheet as a net pension asset or net pension liability for
the funded status of the plan?