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Retirement Benefits
6 Months Ended
Feb. 28, 2017
Compensation and Retirement Disclosure [Abstract]  
Retirement Benefits
Retirement Benefits
The Company sponsors several retirement plans, including defined benefit plans, defined contribution plans and a postretirement health plan.

Effective September 1, 2016, for UK and U.S. benefit plans previously using the yield curve approach to establish discount rates, the Company changed the method used to calculate the service cost and interest cost components of net periodic benefit costs for pension and postretirement benefit plans and will measure these costs by applying the specific spot rates along the yield curve to the plans’ projected cash flows. The Company believes the new approach provides a more precise measurement of service and interest costs by improving the correlation between projected cash flows and the corresponding spot yield curve rates. The change does not affect the measurement of the Company’s pension and other postretirement benefit obligations for those plans and is accounted for as a change in accounting estimate, which is applied prospectively.

Defined Benefit Pension Plans (non-U.S. plans)
The Company has various defined benefit pension plans outside the United States. The principal defined benefit pension plan is the Boots Pension Plan, which covers certain employees in the United Kingdom (the “Boots Plan”). The Boots Plan is a funded final salary defined benefit plan providing pensions and death benefits to members. The Boots Plan was closed to future accrual effective July 1, 2010, with pensions calculated based on salaries up until that date. The Boots Plan is governed by a trustee board, which is independent of the Company. The plan is subject to a full funding actuarial valuation on a triennial basis.

Components of net periodic pension costs for the defined benefit pension plans (in millions):
 
Three Months Ended
 
Six Months Ended
 
February 28, 2017
 
February 29, 2016
 
February 28, 2017
 
February 29, 2016
Service costs
$

 
$

 
$
2

 
$
2

Interest costs
43

 
77

 
86

 
159

Expected returns on plan assets
(36
)
 
(62
)
 
(73
)
 
(127
)
Curtailments
2

 

 
2

 

Total net periodic pension costs
$
9

 
$
15

 
$
17

 
$
34



The Company made cash contributions to its defined benefit pension plans of $9 million for the six months ended February 28, 2017, which primarily related to committed funded payments. The Company plans to contribute an additional $54 million to its defined benefit pension plans in fiscal 2017.

Defined Contribution Plans
The principal retirement plan for U.S. employees is the Walgreen Profit-Sharing Retirement Trust, to which both the Company and participating employees contribute. The Company’s contribution, which has historically related to adjusted FIFO earnings before interest and taxes and a portion of which is in the form of a guaranteed match, is determined annually at the discretion of the Walgreens Boots Alliance Board of Directors (or Compensation Committee thereof). The profit-sharing provision was an expense of $49 million and $106 million for the three and six months ended February 28, 2017 compared to an expense of $53 million and $111 million in the three and six months ended February 29, 2016.

The Company also has other contract based as well as statutory defined contribution schemes, including the Alliance Healthcare & Boots Retirement Savings Plan, to which both the Company and participating employees contribute. The cost recognized in the Consolidated Condensed Statements of Earnings for the three and six months ended February 28, 2017 was $28 million and $56 million compared to a cost of $34 million and $69 million in the three and six months ended February 29, 2016.

Postretirement Healthcare Plan
The Company provides certain health insurance benefits to retired U.S. employees who meet eligibility requirements, including age, years of service and date of hire. The costs of these benefits are accrued over the service life of the employee.