Latest Public Pension Report Means Taxpayers Still on Hook for Trillions

0
2198
article top
money
Photo: Emily Metcalf

BY FRANK KEEGAN  — Write a check for more than $1 trillion today, taxpayers, to pay for state and local government pension shortages.

Prepare to write another bigger one every year for the next 30 years, even if public pension fund investments match historic indexes of the past 30 years —  which would put the Dow above 65,000 and managers actually earn what they promise.
Even if long-term bond yields miraculously increased tenfold overnight, taxpayers would have to write the big checks.
Neither of those miracles will happen, so forced transfer of wealth from one generation to the next, and from private to government pockets, is locked in for at least three decades.
Why? Because this public pension crisis is not going away. It actually is getting worse every year, because politicians, financiers and union bosses lie to taxpayers, public workers and themselves about how much retirement benefits truly cost.
Right now, based on U.S. Census Bureau calculation of a 17.6 percent gain year over year ending June 30, somebody still has to kick in more than $30 trillion for what we already owe, or pension checks bounce. Do the math.
Funds should have gained 45 percent year over year to make up for losses in the Great Recession. And even in the highly unlikely event pension funds eventually do average target gains over 30 years, somebody is going to have to fill big gaps.
If performance falls short, the gaps will be trillions of dollars bigger.
Guess who has to pay up or have our property confiscated? Taxpayers. This is at least $30 trillion taken from a generation already burdened with the biggest government legacy debt in history. It is locked in; no reforms going forward have any significant impact.
The head of California’s bankrupt and corrupt Public Employees Retirement System confessed to Bloomberg News on Thursday that pension investments definitely will continue to fall short.
The probability of funds achieving their 30-year goals of 7 percent to 8 percent a year is zero compared with performance during the past 30 years when you throw current bond yields into the mix.
For example, in 1981 pensions and other investors could lock in a sure-thing 15 percent for 30 years, according to the U.S. Treasury Department. Right now, they can get less than 3 percent for the next 30 years.
All other bond yields tend to go up and down with treasuries, but higher returns bring higher risk.
Public pension funds must have a significant portion of investments risk free, because they guarantee benefits. Guaranteed benefits should be secured by guaranteed investments.
Instead, public pension funds are taking on more risk by betting there never ever will be another market downturn. All of that risk is on taxpayers.
The fact that as of Friday, markets had eaten at least half the year-over-year gains reported for June 30 should be enough for America to demand immediate drastic action on public pensions.
Census reported “total holdings and investments were up four consecutive quarters … reaching the highest level since the second quarter of 2008. … This was the seventh consecutive quarter with a year-to-year increase.”
Wonderful news, right? Wrong! Even those results even if sustained still leave a generation of taxpayers in debt for public pensions.
State and local politicians never can dig us out of this hole. Pension fund managers cannot earn us out of it.
The only thing these latest numbers prove is we are past time for letting politicians deny reality and refuse to deal with it.
Frank Keegan is a national editor for The Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, watchdog.org and statehousenewsonline.com . Any disgusted public employee, journalist, activist organization or citizen watchdog who wants help exposing government waste, fraud and abuse may contact him at: frank.keegan@franklincenterhq.org
For a comprehensive primer on state and municipal government pensions, check statebugetsolutions.org and sunshinereview.org . And for an aggregation of news from around the country, check Pensiontsunami.com .

Comments

comments

Previous articleVolt, Prius or CRV? Numbers Make the Choice Obvious.
Next articleACLU Says Police Need More Training Before Start of APEC
Watchdog.org is a collection of independent journalists covering state-specific and local government activity. The program began in September 2009, the brainchild of the Franklin Center for Government & Public Integrity, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization dedicated to promoting new media journalism. The project provides established investigative journalists with a platform to publish their work. It also affords reporters across the country an opportunity to share information, investigative techniques and resources. By enhancing communication between reporters, the consortium hopes to promote a vibrant 4th Estate, a well-informed electorate and a more transparent government. Watchdog.org utilizes a state-specific approach, in order to provide readers with information that is of proximate and practical interest. Interested parties can contact info@watchdog.org for more information. The Franklin Center is not responsible for the information that appears on the watchdog sites. The organization serves as a capacity builder and networking agent for independent, state-based journalists and organizations. Journalists or organizations interested in joining the watchdog network can contact us at info@franklincenterhq.org