Seminar Countdown

Reserve Your Seat in Advance

Millions Of Retirees Are Counting On Pensions That May Not Be There


Posted on by

retire-man-retirement

 

One of the biggest  issues that face millions of retiring individuals in the coming years is the  grossly underfunded pensions for state workers nationwide.  Just recently  the PEW  Center For The States released their annual update on the status of  state pension plans – the bottom line is not good.

 

“States continue to lose ground in their  efforts to cover the long-term costs of their employees’ pensions and retiree  health care, according to a new analysis by the Pew Center on the States, due to  continued investment losses from the financial crisis of 2008 and states’  inability to set aside enough each year to adequately fund their retirement  promises. States have responded with an unprecedented number of reforms that,  with strong investment gains, may improve the funding situation they face going  forward, but continued fiscal discipline and additional reforms will be needed  to put states back on a firm footing.” 

The report, which is based on fiscal year 2010 data which is that  latest complete data set available, the gap between states’ assets and their  obligations for public sector retirement benefits was $1.38 trillion, up nearly  9 percent from the fiscal year 2009. Of that figure, $757 billion was for  pension promises, and $627 billion was for retiree health care.

The problem, however, is not a current development the recent financial crisis but goes  back over a decade when pension managers began making aggressive return  assumptions of 8% – the same as it is today.  With higher return  estimations the states were required to fund less into pension plans leaving  money available for all sorts of other spending.   What they did not  account for, however, was over a decade of near zero return growth, two nasty  bear markets which decimated investment accounts, two recessions which lowered  tax revenue and a weaker growth economy. PEW stated:

“Investment losses suffered by pension funds  during the Great Recession have been a key driver of growth in states’ unfunded  liabilities. About $6 of every $10 in the funds comes from earnings on  investments; employee and employer contributions make up the rest.”

pew chart

Pew/StreetTalkLive

While  the majority of pension plans were projecting gains of 8% in 2008 the median  loss turned out to be 25% with many performing far worse.  While the market  has rebounded in the past three fiscal years – the hole left by the massive draw  down in 2008, combined with the continued expected return of 8% and  underfunding, have increased the gap to the $757 billion where it sits  today.  Considering the S&P 500 returned just shy of zero in 2012 the  gap will be worse in the next report.

 

As states struggle with budgetary problems, lower revenue and low market  returns – the level of funding obligations continue to impact the health of  pension plans nationwide. According to PEW:

“Many experts say that a healthy pension  system should be at least 80 percent funded. In 2000, more than half of the  states were 100 percent funded, but by 2010 only Wisconsin was fully funded, and  34 were below the 80 percent threshold—up from 31 in 2009 and just 22 in  2008.  Connecticut, Illinois, Kentucky, and Rhode Island  ranked the worst; all were under 55 percent funded in 2010. At the other end of  the spectrum, four states were funded at 95 percent or better: North Carolina,  South Dakota, Washington, and Wisconsin.”

However, even 10-20% underfunding could create problems depending on many  variables such as another recession, stock market swoon or how many individuals  step into retirement.   In order to shore up funding shortfalls in  recent years many pension plans have turned to alternative investments such as  hedge funds and private equity.  Unfortunately, those investments, in many  cases, have lagged well behind the markets over the last couple of years which  has further compounded the problem.  Pension funds are finally beginning to  slowly lower the 8% return assumptions but therein lays another problem.   As pension plans reduce their estimated returns the level of required funding  goes up.  That funding must come from the State’s budgets which are sorely  short of funds to begin with.

Many states have begun to take action by either reducing pension benefits or  increasing employee contributions over  the last three years.  These have been very minor changes and many states  have already acknowledged that any reforms already made will not be sufficient  to control rising long-term retirement costs or reduce the risk of future  underfunding.  PEW stated:

“Though states have enough cash to cover  retiree benefits in the short term, many of them—even with strong market  returns—will not be able to keep up in the long term without some  combination of higher contributions from taxpayers and employees, deep benefit  cuts, and, in some cases, changes in how retirement plans are structured and  benefits are distributed

This does not bode well for many of those workers today that have already  under saved for retirement and are counting on those benefits to fund both  retirement and healthcare needs in the future.  For many pension plans it  has been the equivalent of being in the ring Mike Tyson – they keep getting  knocked down no matter which way they turn.   It is a frustrating  problem with severe consequences to retiree’s as millions of Americans are at  risk in future years.

Of course, all this coincides with a massive number of individuals beginning  to move closer to retirement.  The timing could not be worse and the  problems do not stop there.

Health Care Looks Even Worse

pew healthcare

Pew/StreetTalkLive

On  top of the problem with the state’s retirement plans – retirees’ health care and  other non-pension benefits such as life insurance are even in worse shape.   As of fiscal year 2010 – States had put away only 5 percent of their total bill  coming due for those benefits.   According to PEW:

“Seventeen states set aside no money, and  only seven states had funded at least 25 percent of this long-term liability. In  contrast, Alaska and Arizona had nearly 50 percent of their health care  liabilities covered by assets on hand. No other states came close to that  percentage.

Many states have not held up their end of the  bargain when they should have been paying for the promises they made. All told,  state and local governments participating in state-run retirement systems should  have set aside $124 billion in fiscal year 2010 to pay the recommended  contribution for their pension and retiree health care  obligations. Policy makers were able to make 78 percent of the  recommended contribution toward their states’ pension plans but set aside just  34 percent of what actuaries recommend should be set aside to pay for retiree  health benefits.

While it is currently difficult for states to  make contributions toward their retirement systems, given the drop in revenues  and fiscal stress from the recession, many of these states also  failed to make the recommended contributions when times were  good.

The liability in 2010 was $660 billion but states only had assets to cover  $33.1 billion leaving a $627 billion deficit.  Again it comes down to the  problems with the state’s budgets and priorities.  For years now the  state’s have lived well beyond their means spending money on everything but  their promised obligations in many cases.  In 2010, as unfunded health care  liabilities rose by $22 billion – only seven states fund 25% or more of their  retiree health care obligations:  Alaska, Arizona, North Dakota, Ohio,  Oregon, Virginia, and Wisconsin.

According to PEW states overall should have set aside nearly $51 billion to  pay for health care obligations in fiscal year 2010 but only contributed  slightly more than $17 billion or about 34 percent of what was required for the  year.  While pension obligations are generally funded in advance these  healthcare obligations are generally paid as the expense is incurred.  This  is a giant, and unrealized, vacuum waiting to occur in future years as masses of  retirees begin to incur enormous healthcare costs simultaneously.  With the  massive shortfall of funding in health care plans today – there is no cushion  for a surge in incurred costs in the future.

State’s nationwide have now come to the realization of the problems that lay  ahead and are beginning to slowly take action in reforming their  structures.  However, the assumptions continue to be flawed as there is no  accounting for further recessions, market draw downs, or other events that cause  deterioration in the underlying assets or revenue streams.  In fact,  projections for economic and market growth in a sustained low interest rate  environment may turn out to be very shortsighted.

At some point in the future state retiree’s will begin to be impacted as  pensions reach the limits of their solvency and more radical measures are taken  to shore up liabilities with reality.  With the majority of American’s  under saved for retirement, incomes stagnant and savings on the decline – the  dependency on retirement plans is higher than ever.  That dependency will  likely prove to be a mistake.

Source

Ryan Litfin knew what he wanted to achieve for himself and others very early on. While attending college Ryan Litfin took a multitude of finance and economics courses, which gave him the opportunity to study finance across a variety of continents including Europe and Australia. Ryan Litfin also engaged in courses while studying in Chicago at places such as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade before graduating with a degree in Finance & Economics from Gustavus Adolphus College. Prior to co-founding Vincent Asset Management, Ryan Litfin was engaged in the financial services sector for the better part of a decade. He has also been actively involved in various community and investment groups. Ryan Litfin furthered his investment knowledge and expertise while studying under Kevin Baldwin in Chicago and ultimately achieved the status of a Series 3 Licensed Managed Futures & Commodity Advisor.

Comments are closed.

Back to Top