September 6, 2001 (PLANSPONSOR.com) -- vFinance,
Inc. an investment banking and brokerage firm, has acquired
Critical Advisors, the hedge fund management company for the
Critical Infrastructure Funds.
New York-based Critical Infrastructure Fund I invests in
equities and bonds of companies in regulated industries
such as telecommunications, Internet, cable television, and
electric utilities infrastructure. The fund was founded in
1999.
Under the terms of the agreement, the Critical
Infrastructure Funds will keep its name as it becomes part
of the vFinance product line.
June 8, 2001 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Employers spent
$5.3 trillion on total compensation in 1999, with wages and
salaries accounting for 84% and benefits making up the
remainder, according to the Employee Benefits Research
Institute (EBRI)
The rate drop was largely due to the slowdown in
spending on group health insurance, which fell from an
average growth rate of 11.9% to 4.5% in the 1990s.
The rate of employer spending on group health insurance
has fallen steadily from 1981, when it increased by 17.5%,
to a negative growth rate in 1997 of minus 4.9%. Since
then, the growth rate of employer spending on this benefit
has been increasing, reaching 7.4% in 1999.
Private Sector Benefit Spending $60 billion by
2000
Research by EBRI also shows that spending on retirement
income benefits, excluding Social Security, increased at a
rate of 4%, in comparison to a much slower average annual
growth rate of 1.2% in the 1990s.
Spending on retirement benefit, excluding social
security, is divided as follows:
Private-sector employers spent $55.3 billion in 1980,
increasing to $62.6 billion in 1990 and falling to $60.4
billion at the end of the decade
State and local government spent $19.1 billion in
1980, rising to $33 billion ten years later, and
increasing to $42.5 billion in 1999
The federal government spent $30.1 billion on
retirement income benefits, less Social Security and
railroad retirement in 1980. This increased to $58.8
billion in 1990, and to $69.6 billion in 1999.
In the 1980s, the 5.6% growth rate in employer
spending for retirement income benefits, less Social
Security, by state and local governments outpaced that of
the private sector, which increased at an annual rate of
1.2%.
In the 1990s, private spending on retirement
income benefits decreased at an average annual rate of
minus 0.4%, in comparison to the 2.9% rate among state and
local governments.