Top
Stories

Latest News

States Digging $1 Trillion Pension Hole, Pew Center Says

Rising liabilities, lagging asset growth rates and inadequate legislative action by many states have produced a $1 trillion gap for public pension, retiree health and other retirement benefits.

  • February 19, 2010
  • Comments (0)

Rising liabilities, lagging asset growth rates and inadequate legislative action by many states have produced a $1 trillion gap for public pension, retiree health and other retirement benefits, according to a study issued Thursday, February 18, by the Pew Center on the States.

The Washington-based policy research organization paints a steadily deteriorating portrait among many states whose ability to finance public pension and health programs has fallen well behind the promises made to their citizens.

“What we found was truly troubling,” said Susan K. Urahn, managing director for the Pew Center, in a conference call with reporters. “This is a conservative estimate.”

The states have a combined $2.35 trillion in assets for pensions, health care and non-pension retirement programs for current and retired workers, but they need another $1 trillion to match their liabilities, according to the Pew Center report. Although some states have taken steps to reform public benefits systems, Urahn chided politicians for having “kicked the can down the road” by letting the liability-asset gap widen even when the economy was healthy.

“This problem was not created by the Great Recession,” she said. “[Legislators] need to take action now.” Otherwise, pension and health liabilities will “ultimately crowd out other services” and could force states to raise taxes, she added.

Citing actions by some states, the Pew Center report recommended several reforms:

• Maintain annual funding requirements and make sure investment assumptions aren’t overly optimistic;

• Reduce benefits for new employees by raising the retirement age or altering the pension formula;

• Require employees to make a larger contribution to retirement plans; and

• Improve management and oversight of state pension plans.

 

 

Filed by Robert Steyer of Pensions & Investments, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management's Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Leave A Comment

Guidelines: Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. We will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. You are fully responsible for the content you post.

Daily Q&A

How Do We Build a World-Class Recruiting Department?

I need to establish a strategic plan on how we can become a world-class staffing/recruiting department. Unfortunately, all the historical data from previous recruiting managers got tossed. Do you have any simple tips on how to begin this ambitious plan?

—World-Class Ambition, staffing manager, software/services, Pennsylvania

Read Answer

Stay Connected

Join our community for unlimited access to the latest tips, news and information in the HR world.

HR Jobs

View All Job Listings

Search