When President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) into law on July 4, 2025, the mainstream media immediately retreated to predictable talking points. Detractors framed it as a corporate giveaway, pointing to the permanent extension of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Supporters rightfully championed its retail populism, headlined by the "No Tax on Tips" and "No Tax on Overtime" deductions.
But both sides are missing the most profound structural victory of the legislation. The OBBBA is quietly saving the American defined-benefit pension system, rescuing the retirements of tens of millions of public employees and private-sector union members without a single taxpayer bailout.
THE SIMPLE MATH OF RETIREMENT SECURITY
The health of our retirement systems—from the massive California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) to the Teamsters’ Central States Pension Fund—is dictated by a simple reality: over the long haul, the vast majority of every dollar paid out to a retiree comes from compounded investment returns, not from employee or employer contributions. Pensions operate by promising future benefits, which actuaries calculate as their "liability." To fund these obligations, pensions target a specific rate of return on their investments. CalPERS, for example, currently requires a 6.8% return. If market returns fall short of that hurdle, the gap between what the fund holds and what it owes grows into a massive "unfunded liability." But if returns consistently beat that discount rate, the unfunded liability shrinks, and the plan heals.
HOW PRO-GROWTH TAX POLICY RESCUES PENSIONS
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This is precisely where the OBBBA comes in. Pensions are among the largest institutional owners of corporate America. Therefore, a tax code that empowers American businesses inherently enriches American pensioners.
The OBBBA is a masterclass in pro-investment architecture. It permanently locked in 100% bonus depreciation, allowing businesses to fully deduct the cost of machinery and equipment in year one. It restored immediate domestic research-and-development expensing. It enshrined the 20% qualified business income deduction for pass-throughs and outright canceled the looming 2026 tax cliff that would have devastated risk markets.
"A tax code that empowers American businesses inherently enriches American pensioners."
What happens when businesses can expense capital investments immediately and operate with a permanent, lower effective tax rate? Corporate free cash flow surges. That excess capital doesn't disappear; it flows back to institutional shareholders—pension funds—through stock dividends, share buybacks, and multiple expansion. It drives up the valuations of the public equities, private equity firms, and corporate credit that dominate institutional portfolios.
PROOF IN THE NUMBERS
We are already seeing this policy dividend in action. Benefiting from the strong post-election market rally that followed President Trump's victory in November 2024, CalPERS entered this new policy environment having aggressively rebuilt its funded status. In just two years, it climbed from a perilous 71.4% funded in 2023 to 79% in 2025. This recovery was propelled by an 11.6% fiscal-year return that absolutely crushed the 6.8% requirement.
The engine of that growth? A 16.8% surge in public equities and a 14.3% jump in private equity. The OBBBA's tax provisions—particularly the QSBS expansion and pass-through deductions—are uniquely engineered to sustain the high exit multiples and EBITDA growth that private markets depend on to deliver these exact returns.
But this isn't just an equities story. The Central States Pension Fund, which covers roughly 330,000 Teamsters, relies on a conservatively managed, fixed-income-heavy strategy to match bond yields directly to monthly retiree checks. By flooding corporate balance sheets with untaxed cash, the OBBBA strengthens corporate interest-coverage ratios, reduces default risk, and stabilizes the corporate credit market. This macroeconomic backstop ensures that the bonds underwriting union retirements remain rock solid.
A TRUE MAIN STREET TRIUMPH
Critics will inevitably point to the legislation's fiscal price tag and the spending reductions in programs like Medicaid and SNAP required to offset it. Those are real debates to be had. But any honest accounting of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act must include its monumental impact on middle-class retirements.
When pension assets grow, the pressure on taxpayers to funnel emergency cash into failing public systems evaporates, freeing up local budgets for actual civic services. When multiemployer union plans stabilize, American workers can sleep soundly knowing their deferred wages are safe.
The pro-investment core of the OBBBA proves once again that the most effective social safety net is a thriving, unburdened economy. The American pension system is quietly getting the lifeline it desperately needed—and it didn’t cost a dime in bailouts.

