Springfield Police and Fire Pension Fund

 

Washington View: Public employee pensions are a ticking time bomb

By Don Brunell 

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

 <http://www.columbian.com/photos/2009/dec/16/1302/> photo

Don Brunell

Most people know that our $13 trillion national debt is endangering
America's credit rating and pushing the United States closer to bankruptcy.
But hidden beneath the surface is another ticking time bomb that threatens
economic collapse in cities and states across the country: unfunded public
employee pensions.

Historically, increasing public employee pensions has been a practical way
to resolve a budget crisis. For many elected officials, voting to approve
richer pensions is easy because they know they'll be long gone before the
bill comes due. But now, workers are retiring earlier and living longer,
leading to the same fiscal train wreck that has Social Security teetering on
the brink of bankruptcy.

Lawmakers are supposed to set aside money each year to fund public pensions,
but they often divert that money to other programs. In the meantime, the
unfunded pension liability grows - silently, inexorably shackling future
generations to suffocating debt.

In the past, private companies fell into the same trap, but as of next year,
private employers will be required to fund 100 percent of their pension
obligations. Lawmakers did not apply the same rules to themselves. Their
reason? Unlike private companies, government cannot go bankrupt because it
can always get more money from taxpayers through higher taxes.

According to an analysis by the Pew Center on the States, state and local
governments now owe at least $1 trillion to public employee pension
accounts. To pay that debt, taxpayers would have to spend $1 million a day
for the next 2,740 years. That works out to about $8,800 for each American
household, on top of their estimated $120,000 share of our national debt.

How did this happen? 

Simply put, state lawmakers didn't make the required payments to their
pension plans. According to the Washington Post, "They failed to squirrel
away enough money to pay retiree health benefits and, perhaps most
egregious, they increased their benefits without figuring out how to pay for
them." A separate report by Wilshire Consulting on 125 state plans found
that in 2008 elected officials paid only 65 percent of what they owed to
state pensions. 

Conservative estimate

Pew's $1 trillion figure - tallied through the end of the 2008 fiscal year -
is conservative given that it doesn't capture the stock market losses
incurred in the second half of that year. To make matters worse, the study
did not include many city, county and municipal pension plans, which are
thought to have similar funding shortfalls.

What about Washington state? According to Pew, state lawmakers have failed
to make the total required pension contributions since 2001. In fact,
between 1999 and 2008, Washington's pension liabilities outpaced assets
almost 2 to 1. And those figures don't account for state investment losses
due to the recession.

Pew says our state officials must improve how they manage our long-term
liabilities for both pensions and retiree health care and other benefits. 

How can they do that?

To help close the gap, other states are scaling back their retirement plans.
According to Pew, 10 states have curbed benefits to new workers or raised
the retirement age. Nevada, for instance, lowered pension benefits for those
hired after Jan. 1. It also raised the retirement age for public workers
from 60 to 62, starting this year. Another 10 states - including Iowa,
Nebraska and New Mexico - boosted employee contributions. 

Workers are also contributing more to their retirement health care plans.
For instance, new state workers in Kentucky must now put 1 percent more of
their paychecks toward their retiree health plans.

But public employee unions in Washington state are fighting benefit cuts and
additional contributions. 

As Gov. Chris Gregoire starts contract negotiations with the state employee
unions and as state legislators hit the campaign trail, they need to face up
to the fact that failure to fully fund public employee pensions has created
a ticking time bomb which gets larger by the day. 

And as those legislators campaign, voters should ask them a simple question:
"Why are you mortgaging our children's future?"

Don Brunell is president of the Association of Washington Business,
Washington state's chamber of commerce. Visit www.awb.org.

 

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