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ERISA permits distribution of pension benefits only to certain persons and at certain times. A vested participant does not normally have an immediate right to her accumulated saving, nor can she direct its payment to someone else. Pension plans are designed to provide workers with a secure source of retirement income, not to facilitate general purpose savings. Therefore, access to pension savings is restricted, either by the terms of the plan or by ERISA itself. ERISA’s rules governing pension plan distributions address three issues. First, the timing of distributions is restricted. Second, the anti-alienation rule generally limits the recipients of distributions to the participant and her beneficiaries, although a spouse, former spouse, or dependent child of the participant may enforce certain state domestic relations law claims against the pension by means of a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO). And third, the participant’s spouse is, in effect, designated primary beneficiary.
Classifying passive appreciation of separate property during marriage constitutes a boundary issue for any statutory matrimonial regime. Basically, there are three different classification approaches, namely the nothing approach, the all approach and the proportional approach. Interestingly, these approaches all coexist and contradict with each other under Chinese family law. This Chapter analyzes them and concludes particularly against the proportional approach which is popular in many jurisdictions, such as in China, the Switzerland and the United States. Further, with an economic analysis (i.e. the revised mimic argument) this Chapter concludes for the all approach that all the passive appreciation of separate property during marriage shall be classified as community property and shared by both spouses equally.
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