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The Employee Retirement Income Security Act Of 1974 A Political History 1st Edition James Wooten

  • SKU: BELL-51591322
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act Of 1974 A Political History 1st Edition James Wooten
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The Employee Retirement Income Security Act Of 1974 A Political History 1st Edition James Wooten instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of California Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.19 MB
Pages: 433
Author: James Wooten
ISBN: 9780520931398, 0520931394
Language: English
Year: 2005
Edition: 1

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The Employee Retirement Income Security Act Of 1974 A Political History 1st Edition James Wooten by James Wooten 9780520931398, 0520931394 instant download after payment.

This study of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) explains in detail how public officials in the executive branch and Congress overcame strong opposition from business and organized labor to pass landmark legislation regulating employer-sponsored retirement and health plans. Before Congress passed ERISA, federal law gave employers and unions great discretion in the design and operation of employee benefit plans. Most importantly, firms and unions could and often did establish pension plans that placed employees at great risk for not receiving any retirement benefits. In the early 1960s, officials in the executive branch proposed a number of regulatory initiatives to protect employees, but business groups and most labor unions objected to the key proposals. Faced with opposition from powerful interest groups, legislative entrepreneurs in Congress, chiefly New York Republican senator Jacob K. Javits, took the case for pension reform directly to voters by publicizing frightening statistics and "horror stories" about pension plans. This deft and successful effort to mobilize the media and public opinion overwhelmed the business community and organized labor and persuaded Javits's colleagues in Congress to support comprehensive pension reform legislation. The enactment of ERISA in September 1974 recast federal policy for private pension plans by making worker security an overriding objective of federal law.

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