Study: State worker pension systems in best shape since 2008
PROTECTED CONTENT
If you’re a current subscriber, log in below. If you would like to subscribe, please click the subscribe tab above.
Username and Password Help
Please enter your email and we will send your username and password to you.
A new study finds pension systems for state government workers are in their best shape since the Great Recession
GEOFF MULVIHILL
Associated Press
Pension systems for state government workers across the U.S. are in their best shape since the Great Recession began more than a dozen years ago, according to a study released Tuesday.
The Pew Charitable Trust report credits a booming stock market over the past year as well as states’ longer-term steps, which include boosting taxpayer contri- butions to public pension funds and reducing prom- ised retirement benefits, particularly to newly hired workers.
“The better decisions, the fiscal discipline, is something that states can keep doing next year and the year after,” said Pew’s David Draine, one of the report’s authors. “You can’t hope for once-in-a generation returns to occur again.”
The health of public pension systems resonates beyond government employees. When the systems are poorly funded, state and local governments have to con- sider raises taxes or cut- ting basic government services to pay retirees’ pensions.
Pew estimated that state retirement systems have enough assets to pay more than 80% of their obligations, the first time since 2008 they have been so well funded.
The stock market rally that followed a freefall when the coronavirus pandemic started in 2020 has been a major factor in rebuilding the funds.
States also have been contributing more taxpay- er money. Pew found that in 2014, only 17 states were contributing enough to stabilize or reduce their pension debts. But in 2019, the latest year for which full data was available, 35 states were contributing at that level.
Pew also found that the four states with the most endangered pension sys- tems — Illinois, Kentucky, New Jersey and Pennsylvania — have been ramping up their contributions, averaging annual growth of 16%.
Illinois and New Jersey’s plans still had slightly under 40% of their required funding by 2019, Pew found. Kentucky’s funding level was under 45% and Pennsylvania’s was 58%.
South Dakota and Wisconsin had fully fund- ed state pension systems, and several other states were close to that level.
Pew’s study covered pension systems run or funded by state govern- ments. In some states, pension funds for local governments and school districts are in worse shape.