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Public Employee Pensions: Does the Worst Case Provide the Best Guidance for the Future?

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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-11 02:27 PM
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Public Employee Pensions: Does the Worst Case Provide the Best Guidance for the Future?
How many state or local jurisdictions have lost 40 percent of their population in the last four decades and have their top elected officials convicted of corruption?

While this may fit the bill in some places, it is not typical for the country as a whole. Populations are continuing to rise in most areas and the number of elected officials who are convicted for corruption is still a relatively small minority.

This might lead one to wonder why both the New York Times and Wall Street Journal were so anxious to tell readers that the city of Prichard, Alabama foretells the future for their public employee pension plans. The city has stopped making pension payments to 40 retired workers who have earned them.

It is worth noting that the pension obligations do not appear to be quite the crushing burdens implied in these articles. The NYT reports that the average pension is $12,000 a year.

This means that if the full payment were made out of current tax revenue it would imply a tax of approximately $18 per capita on the town's 27,000 residents. This is less than 0.14 of the city's per capita income.

http://www.cepr.net/index.php/beat-the-press/


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county worker Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-11 04:34 PM
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1. The pension were most likely defined benefit plans that the employees and employers
paid into. The money is invested and the retirement benefits are paid out of the profits of the investments. When the return on investment is not enough the amount put in must increase also.

The story and what I have heard that governments must raise taxes to pay the retiree benefits does not make sense to me. They may have to put more into the retirement accounts to earn enough returns for future benefits but not for current retirees' benefits.
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salin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-03-11 04:37 PM
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2. many municipalities (and states) underfunded - based on assuming the rosiest of
market predictions - per the rate at which growth would occur. Became a favorite 'balancing the budget' trick somewhere in the mid eighties.
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