"From 2014 through fiscal 2017, for the first time on
record, New York City’s pension contributions exceeded
actual and projected (mostly bond-financed) capital
expenditures. In other words, the city has been spending
more to meet its pension obligations than to build
and renovate bridges, parks, schools, and other public
assets. In fiscal 2018, roughly 57% of contributions will
be needed simply to continue paying down what the
city still owes its pension systems, in order to continue
paying benefits promised to retirees. The rest will
cover the “normal” cost of added benefits earned by
city employees. In other words, if the pension systems
had been fully funded in the past, the city would have
saved more than $5 billion."
"You would be surprised that in some schools, the restriction appears to be implicitly understood, since they neither have a line for temporarily restricted funds on their balance sheet nor the statement below in their respective financial statement notes".
"Our $559,667 sample also included four coaching-related payment requests, totaling $12,530, for training and meeting expenses. We found that three of the four sampled coaching-related payments, totaling $4,135, were not adequately supported. None of these three payment requests contained copies of the bills for which NYCLA requested reimbursement, such as an invoice from the venue in which a meeting was held."
The document provides an assessment of India's fiscal situation for the base year 2012-13 if no corrective policy actions are taken. It estimates that the fiscal deficit would reach around 6.1% of GDP compared to the budget estimate of 5.1%, due to a likely tax revenue shortfall of Rs. 60,000 crore and higher than budgeted subsidy expenditures of Rs. 70,000 crore. Key risks are seen in oil and fertilizer subsidies due to rising international prices and a weakening rupee.
Banks are defined as entities authorized by the Central Bank's Monetary Board to engage in lending funds obtained through deposit accounts. They have four main functions:
1) Depository function, which involves holding deposits for individuals and businesses in accounts like savings, checking, money market, and certificates of deposit.
2) Trust function, where they manage assets for trustors and distribute them to beneficiaries.
3) Collection and remittance of checks, payments, and funds for customers and take a fee for these services.
4) Making loans and providing credit to individuals and businesses, as well as discounting financial instruments.
The Sta. Cruz Savings and Development Cooperative was organized in 1983 to provide financial assistance to farmers. It started with 25 members and 5,000 PHP in capital. Through various capital building activities like pageants and raffles, its capital and membership grew. It expanded its services over time to include credit, deposits, and livelihood programs. It changed its name and expanded its area of operations. Currently it focuses on savings and credit services while supporting members' livelihoods. It has over 3 branches and partnerships to better serve its growing membership.
20151008 The Future Book - Edition 2015 finalSarah Luheshi
The document provides an overview of the UK pension system and changes that have impacted defined contribution pensions. It describes the state pension system and voluntary private pensions. It outlines risks in pension saving and how defined benefit, defined contribution, and hybrid schemes allocate risks differently. It also discusses demographic trends like increasing lifespans and market changes that have reduced defined benefit provision, leading to more people saving in defined contribution schemes.
The document outlines the legislative priorities of Houston Community College for the 83rd Texas Legislative Session. Key priorities include adequate base funding for operations and growth, adopting an outcomes-based funding model that accounts for challenges faced by community college students, expanding grant-based financial aid for community college students, restoring full funding for employee benefits, and obtaining funding for new facilities and programs to address the nursing shortage.
"You would be surprised that in some schools, the restriction appears to be implicitly understood, since they neither have a line for temporarily restricted funds on their balance sheet nor the statement below in their respective financial statement notes".
"Our $559,667 sample also included four coaching-related payment requests, totaling $12,530, for training and meeting expenses. We found that three of the four sampled coaching-related payments, totaling $4,135, were not adequately supported. None of these three payment requests contained copies of the bills for which NYCLA requested reimbursement, such as an invoice from the venue in which a meeting was held."
The document provides an assessment of India's fiscal situation for the base year 2012-13 if no corrective policy actions are taken. It estimates that the fiscal deficit would reach around 6.1% of GDP compared to the budget estimate of 5.1%, due to a likely tax revenue shortfall of Rs. 60,000 crore and higher than budgeted subsidy expenditures of Rs. 70,000 crore. Key risks are seen in oil and fertilizer subsidies due to rising international prices and a weakening rupee.
Banks are defined as entities authorized by the Central Bank's Monetary Board to engage in lending funds obtained through deposit accounts. They have four main functions:
1) Depository function, which involves holding deposits for individuals and businesses in accounts like savings, checking, money market, and certificates of deposit.
2) Trust function, where they manage assets for trustors and distribute them to beneficiaries.
3) Collection and remittance of checks, payments, and funds for customers and take a fee for these services.
4) Making loans and providing credit to individuals and businesses, as well as discounting financial instruments.
The Sta. Cruz Savings and Development Cooperative was organized in 1983 to provide financial assistance to farmers. It started with 25 members and 5,000 PHP in capital. Through various capital building activities like pageants and raffles, its capital and membership grew. It expanded its services over time to include credit, deposits, and livelihood programs. It changed its name and expanded its area of operations. Currently it focuses on savings and credit services while supporting members' livelihoods. It has over 3 branches and partnerships to better serve its growing membership.
20151008 The Future Book - Edition 2015 finalSarah Luheshi
The document provides an overview of the UK pension system and changes that have impacted defined contribution pensions. It describes the state pension system and voluntary private pensions. It outlines risks in pension saving and how defined benefit, defined contribution, and hybrid schemes allocate risks differently. It also discusses demographic trends like increasing lifespans and market changes that have reduced defined benefit provision, leading to more people saving in defined contribution schemes.
The document outlines the legislative priorities of Houston Community College for the 83rd Texas Legislative Session. Key priorities include adequate base funding for operations and growth, adopting an outcomes-based funding model that accounts for challenges faced by community college students, expanding grant-based financial aid for community college students, restoring full funding for employee benefits, and obtaining funding for new facilities and programs to address the nursing shortage.
The document summarizes and critiques recommendations made by the Pew Center on the States and the Laura and John Arnold Foundation to reform Kentucky's public pension system. It argues that their recommendations fail to achieve the three goals they set out: [1] reducing the pension funding gap, [2] creating a sustainable plan, and [3] ensuring the system can recruit and retain talented workers. Specifically, it claims their proposals do nothing to prevent future funding shortfalls, underestimate costs which could make the plan unsustainable, and shift more risk and uncertainty onto employees in a way that could hurt recruitment and retention.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI)inventionjournals
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
Governor honohan's address to the iiea restoring ireland's credit by reduci...ExSite
The document discusses reducing uncertainty in Ireland's economy by addressing uncertainty around banks and other factors. It notes that projections of growth, budgets, and bank loan losses have often lacked acknowledgment of uncertainty. Reducing uncertainty facing the Irish economy is a priority. While EU/IMF support provides funding, it does not directly address "tail risk" or uncertainty. Over the next few years, Ireland needs to demonstrate reduced debt levels and lower bank tail risk through continued fiscal reforms and further analysis of bank loan books to reduce perceived risk and uncertainty.
Role of bonds in economic development of pakistanSaad Hanif
The document is a report on the role of bonds in Pakistan's economic development prepared by Muhammad Saad Hanif for the Liaquat College of Management Sciences. It discusses how bonds work as long-term borrowing for both governments and firms. It also outlines the benefits of developed bond markets, such as providing liquidity and alternatives to bank deposits. While bond markets can help economies, Pakistan is still developing its bond market which only represents 1% of GDP, compared to other countries. The future of bonds in Pakistan is promising as bond markets are becoming a more significant source of financing.
The document discusses the regulatory capital requirements for banks' retail and SME portfolios under the Basel Accords. It provides background on the CBN's 2013 framework implementing Basel II/III in Nigeria. The three pillars of Basel II & III are then explained: Pillar 1 sets minimum capital requirements; Pillar 2 involves supervisory review; and Pillar 3 promotes market discipline through disclosure. The document goes on to discuss how the Basel Accords affect retail/SME loans, including risk sensitivity, standardized vs. IRB approaches, firm size adjustments, and challenges in impact assessment due to data and definition issues. It concludes with recommendations to recalibrate Basel III to better support SMEs while containing systemic risk.
International Public Sector Accounting Standards and Financial Reporting in N...iosrjce
IOSR Journal of Economics and Finance (IOSR-JEF) discourages theoretical articles that are limited to axiomatics or that discuss minor variations of familiar models. Similarly, IOSR-JEF has little interest in empirical papers that do not explain the model's theoretical foundations or that exhausts themselves in applying a new or established technique (such as cointegration) to another data set without providing very good reasons why this research is important.
The document analyzes the risk and return of Pakistan's bond market from 2005 to 2015. It aims to analyze the factors affecting returns in the bond market. The researchers conducted interviews and literature reviews on bond markets. They identified key factors like risk, interest rates, fiscal deficit, exchange rates and GDP that could impact bond yields. Regression analysis was performed on Pakistan Investment Bond data from 3, 5 and 10 year bonds against the independent variables. The results found positive relationships between bond yields and risk, interest rates, and fiscal deficit. Exchange rates and GDP had negative relationships with bond yields.
Strategic Planning in co-operative societies is one of most important activity that sets the stage for growth and development of a co-operative society.
The document provides an overview of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development's (EBRD) strategy for Montenegro from 2007-2011. Some key points:
- Montenegro has made progress in transitioning to a market economy and multiparty democracy since gaining independence in 2006. However, challenges remain especially in institutional reform, infrastructure development, and energy sector reform.
- The EBRD's portfolio in Montenegro up to 2006 was limited due to the country's small size, totaling €36.2 million with a focus on infrastructure, financial, and corporate sectors.
- The EBRD's strategic priorities will be supporting private sector development, particularly tourism; continuing infrastructure projects with a transition and regional impact;
This document discusses non-performing assets (NPAs) in the Indian banking sector. It provides background on banking sector reforms in India and defines key terms related to NPAs such as non-performing asset, past due, and overdue. It notes that while reforms progressed in areas like interest rates and reserve requirements, the pace of reform did not match expectations. It also discusses the classification of assets as NPAs, with the criteria shifting from past due over 180-270 days to overdue over 90-180 days depending on the type of loan or bank. The document provides details on identifying and managing NPAs in the Indian banking system.
20151105 Retirement Funding Report commissioned by SMF finalSarah Luheshi
The document summarizes findings from modeling the potential retirement incomes and outcomes for five hypothetical individuals under different pension decumulation patterns. Key findings include:
- Individuals risk exhausting their pension pot during their lifetime if they withdraw funds at an unsustainable rate, leaving them reliant on the state pension for income. Higher withdrawal rates and lower investment returns increase this risk.
- Withdrawing funds too conservatively could leave individuals with a residual pension pot at death, missing an opportunity to maintain a higher quality of life during retirement.
- The risk to the government is greater when individuals exhaust their pension pot quickly and rely more on means-tested benefits later in life.
20151105 Retirement Funding Report commissioned by SMF finalSarah Luheshi
The document summarizes findings from modeling the potential retirement incomes and outcomes for five hypothetical individuals under different decumulation patterns. Key findings include:
- Individuals risk exhausting their pension pot during their lifetime if they withdraw unsustainably high amounts, becoming reliant on the state pension for income. Higher withdrawal rates and lower returns increase this risk.
- Individuals may have residual pension funds left at death if they withdraw too low amounts, missing an opportunity to maintain a higher quality of life during retirement.
- The risk to the government is greater when individuals exhaust their pension pot quickly and rely more on means-tested benefits, increasing long-term benefit costs to the state.
Understanding your paycheck powerpoint presentation 1.13.1kdcsdross
This document discusses various aspects of paychecks and taxes. It explains that around 31% of an individual's paycheck goes to deductions, with taxes being the largest expense. It outlines three common ways employers pay employees - via paycheck, direct deposit, or payroll card. Payroll cards allow electronic payment onto a debit card but can involve various fees. The document also discusses tax withholding forms, reading a paycheck stub, and common deductions like federal withholding tax.
This document defines and discusses non-performing assets (NPAs) for banks and financial institutions. It states that an asset becomes non-performing when it stops generating income for the bank. It is considered non-performing when principal or interest payments on a loan are overdue for 90 days. High levels of NPAs can put pressure on banks and lead to write-downs. The document outlines reasons for NPAs like bad lending practices or economic downturns. NPAs can negatively impact depositors, shareholders, and the overall economy by redirecting funds from viable projects to non-performing loans.
* Member A paid $120 in April, so the chapter received $120 in cash that month
* Member B paid $120 in May, so the chapter received $120 in cash that month
* Member C paid $120 in June, so the chapter received $120 in cash that month
* Total cash received = $120 (Member A) + $120 (Member B) + $120 (Member C) = $360
The correct answer is A. The chapter received a total of $360 in cash during the year from the dues payments of the three members.
Indian banks have pursued various strategies to manage rising NPAs, including preventative measures like monitoring early warning signs and proper risk assessment, as well as curative measures like restructuring loans and using legal tools for recovery. While NPAs declined overall in the past decade, analysts believe some banks concealed bad assets. The global financial crisis caused NPAs to surge in the US and Europe, threatening banking systems. India's economic slowdown has also impacted loan repayment, raising concerns about future NPA levels in the country.
Health Insurance Premium-Sharing by Employees and Retirees in the Public SectorLuis Taveras EMBA, MS
The cost of health insurance for New York City public employees and retirees has more than doubled in the last ten years, and its continued growth will be a major driver of projected budget gaps. While the total city budget is projected to grow 11 percent from fiscal years 2012 to 2016, health insurance costs will grow by almost 40 percent and comprise 70 percent of the projected budget gap in 2016.
Medpac Report to Congress (2015)- Medicare Payment PolicyDr Dev Kambhampati
The document is a report from the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) to Congress on Medicare payment policy. MedPAC is an independent agency that advises Congress on issues affecting the Medicare program. The report provides recommendations on updating payments in Medicare's traditional fee-for-service program and the Medicare Advantage program. It finds that Medicare payments are generally adequate but costs are still rising, and it recommends no payment updates for some services to control spending growth while ensuring access to care.
Implications of public pension enhancement in CanadaAlex Mazer
Common Wealth co-founder Alex Mazer's presentation on the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan and Canada Pension Plan enhancement to SHARE's Toronto Pension and Investment Governance Course on May 6, 2016.
The document discusses several topics related to financial markets in 2011 and beyond. It first looks at whether anyone can truly predict market performance based on the volatility seen in 2008. It then examines the performance of various asset classes from 2000-2010. The document also covers issues around Social Security, including myths, the current status of the trust fund, and options for reform. Finally, it discusses the growing crisis in public pension plans, comparing defined benefit and defined contribution plans, and how states are dealing with underfunding issues.
The document summarizes and critiques recommendations made by the Pew Center on the States and the Laura and John Arnold Foundation to reform Kentucky's public pension system. It argues that their recommendations fail to achieve the three goals they set out: [1] reducing the pension funding gap, [2] creating a sustainable plan, and [3] ensuring the system can recruit and retain talented workers. Specifically, it claims their proposals do nothing to prevent future funding shortfalls, underestimate costs which could make the plan unsustainable, and shift more risk and uncertainty onto employees in a way that could hurt recruitment and retention.
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI)inventionjournals
International Journal of Business and Management Invention (IJBMI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Business and Management. IJBMI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Business and Management, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online
Governor honohan's address to the iiea restoring ireland's credit by reduci...ExSite
The document discusses reducing uncertainty in Ireland's economy by addressing uncertainty around banks and other factors. It notes that projections of growth, budgets, and bank loan losses have often lacked acknowledgment of uncertainty. Reducing uncertainty facing the Irish economy is a priority. While EU/IMF support provides funding, it does not directly address "tail risk" or uncertainty. Over the next few years, Ireland needs to demonstrate reduced debt levels and lower bank tail risk through continued fiscal reforms and further analysis of bank loan books to reduce perceived risk and uncertainty.
Role of bonds in economic development of pakistanSaad Hanif
The document is a report on the role of bonds in Pakistan's economic development prepared by Muhammad Saad Hanif for the Liaquat College of Management Sciences. It discusses how bonds work as long-term borrowing for both governments and firms. It also outlines the benefits of developed bond markets, such as providing liquidity and alternatives to bank deposits. While bond markets can help economies, Pakistan is still developing its bond market which only represents 1% of GDP, compared to other countries. The future of bonds in Pakistan is promising as bond markets are becoming a more significant source of financing.
The document discusses the regulatory capital requirements for banks' retail and SME portfolios under the Basel Accords. It provides background on the CBN's 2013 framework implementing Basel II/III in Nigeria. The three pillars of Basel II & III are then explained: Pillar 1 sets minimum capital requirements; Pillar 2 involves supervisory review; and Pillar 3 promotes market discipline through disclosure. The document goes on to discuss how the Basel Accords affect retail/SME loans, including risk sensitivity, standardized vs. IRB approaches, firm size adjustments, and challenges in impact assessment due to data and definition issues. It concludes with recommendations to recalibrate Basel III to better support SMEs while containing systemic risk.
International Public Sector Accounting Standards and Financial Reporting in N...iosrjce
IOSR Journal of Economics and Finance (IOSR-JEF) discourages theoretical articles that are limited to axiomatics or that discuss minor variations of familiar models. Similarly, IOSR-JEF has little interest in empirical papers that do not explain the model's theoretical foundations or that exhausts themselves in applying a new or established technique (such as cointegration) to another data set without providing very good reasons why this research is important.
The document analyzes the risk and return of Pakistan's bond market from 2005 to 2015. It aims to analyze the factors affecting returns in the bond market. The researchers conducted interviews and literature reviews on bond markets. They identified key factors like risk, interest rates, fiscal deficit, exchange rates and GDP that could impact bond yields. Regression analysis was performed on Pakistan Investment Bond data from 3, 5 and 10 year bonds against the independent variables. The results found positive relationships between bond yields and risk, interest rates, and fiscal deficit. Exchange rates and GDP had negative relationships with bond yields.
Strategic Planning in co-operative societies is one of most important activity that sets the stage for growth and development of a co-operative society.
The document provides an overview of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development's (EBRD) strategy for Montenegro from 2007-2011. Some key points:
- Montenegro has made progress in transitioning to a market economy and multiparty democracy since gaining independence in 2006. However, challenges remain especially in institutional reform, infrastructure development, and energy sector reform.
- The EBRD's portfolio in Montenegro up to 2006 was limited due to the country's small size, totaling €36.2 million with a focus on infrastructure, financial, and corporate sectors.
- The EBRD's strategic priorities will be supporting private sector development, particularly tourism; continuing infrastructure projects with a transition and regional impact;
This document discusses non-performing assets (NPAs) in the Indian banking sector. It provides background on banking sector reforms in India and defines key terms related to NPAs such as non-performing asset, past due, and overdue. It notes that while reforms progressed in areas like interest rates and reserve requirements, the pace of reform did not match expectations. It also discusses the classification of assets as NPAs, with the criteria shifting from past due over 180-270 days to overdue over 90-180 days depending on the type of loan or bank. The document provides details on identifying and managing NPAs in the Indian banking system.
20151105 Retirement Funding Report commissioned by SMF finalSarah Luheshi
The document summarizes findings from modeling the potential retirement incomes and outcomes for five hypothetical individuals under different pension decumulation patterns. Key findings include:
- Individuals risk exhausting their pension pot during their lifetime if they withdraw funds at an unsustainable rate, leaving them reliant on the state pension for income. Higher withdrawal rates and lower investment returns increase this risk.
- Withdrawing funds too conservatively could leave individuals with a residual pension pot at death, missing an opportunity to maintain a higher quality of life during retirement.
- The risk to the government is greater when individuals exhaust their pension pot quickly and rely more on means-tested benefits later in life.
20151105 Retirement Funding Report commissioned by SMF finalSarah Luheshi
The document summarizes findings from modeling the potential retirement incomes and outcomes for five hypothetical individuals under different decumulation patterns. Key findings include:
- Individuals risk exhausting their pension pot during their lifetime if they withdraw unsustainably high amounts, becoming reliant on the state pension for income. Higher withdrawal rates and lower returns increase this risk.
- Individuals may have residual pension funds left at death if they withdraw too low amounts, missing an opportunity to maintain a higher quality of life during retirement.
- The risk to the government is greater when individuals exhaust their pension pot quickly and rely more on means-tested benefits, increasing long-term benefit costs to the state.
Understanding your paycheck powerpoint presentation 1.13.1kdcsdross
This document discusses various aspects of paychecks and taxes. It explains that around 31% of an individual's paycheck goes to deductions, with taxes being the largest expense. It outlines three common ways employers pay employees - via paycheck, direct deposit, or payroll card. Payroll cards allow electronic payment onto a debit card but can involve various fees. The document also discusses tax withholding forms, reading a paycheck stub, and common deductions like federal withholding tax.
This document defines and discusses non-performing assets (NPAs) for banks and financial institutions. It states that an asset becomes non-performing when it stops generating income for the bank. It is considered non-performing when principal or interest payments on a loan are overdue for 90 days. High levels of NPAs can put pressure on banks and lead to write-downs. The document outlines reasons for NPAs like bad lending practices or economic downturns. NPAs can negatively impact depositors, shareholders, and the overall economy by redirecting funds from viable projects to non-performing loans.
* Member A paid $120 in April, so the chapter received $120 in cash that month
* Member B paid $120 in May, so the chapter received $120 in cash that month
* Member C paid $120 in June, so the chapter received $120 in cash that month
* Total cash received = $120 (Member A) + $120 (Member B) + $120 (Member C) = $360
The correct answer is A. The chapter received a total of $360 in cash during the year from the dues payments of the three members.
Indian banks have pursued various strategies to manage rising NPAs, including preventative measures like monitoring early warning signs and proper risk assessment, as well as curative measures like restructuring loans and using legal tools for recovery. While NPAs declined overall in the past decade, analysts believe some banks concealed bad assets. The global financial crisis caused NPAs to surge in the US and Europe, threatening banking systems. India's economic slowdown has also impacted loan repayment, raising concerns about future NPA levels in the country.
Health Insurance Premium-Sharing by Employees and Retirees in the Public SectorLuis Taveras EMBA, MS
The cost of health insurance for New York City public employees and retirees has more than doubled in the last ten years, and its continued growth will be a major driver of projected budget gaps. While the total city budget is projected to grow 11 percent from fiscal years 2012 to 2016, health insurance costs will grow by almost 40 percent and comprise 70 percent of the projected budget gap in 2016.
Medpac Report to Congress (2015)- Medicare Payment PolicyDr Dev Kambhampati
The document is a report from the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) to Congress on Medicare payment policy. MedPAC is an independent agency that advises Congress on issues affecting the Medicare program. The report provides recommendations on updating payments in Medicare's traditional fee-for-service program and the Medicare Advantage program. It finds that Medicare payments are generally adequate but costs are still rising, and it recommends no payment updates for some services to control spending growth while ensuring access to care.
Implications of public pension enhancement in CanadaAlex Mazer
Common Wealth co-founder Alex Mazer's presentation on the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan and Canada Pension Plan enhancement to SHARE's Toronto Pension and Investment Governance Course on May 6, 2016.
The document discusses several topics related to financial markets in 2011 and beyond. It first looks at whether anyone can truly predict market performance based on the volatility seen in 2008. It then examines the performance of various asset classes from 2000-2010. The document also covers issues around Social Security, including myths, the current status of the trust fund, and options for reform. Finally, it discusses the growing crisis in public pension plans, comparing defined benefit and defined contribution plans, and how states are dealing with underfunding issues.
The document is a report by Boston College Center for Work & Family sponsored by MetLife that examines how multinational companies are helping employees better manage their personal finances globally. It finds that financial wellness is influenced by factors like financial literacy, behavior, situation, and stressors. While government provisions and cultural differences impact programs, companies are increasingly providing financial education to address lack of preparation for financial decision-making and retirement responsibility among consumers worldwide in light of pension changes. The recession had varied impacts by country but increased concerns over job security and financial stress for many.
Gary Trennepohl presents "Financial Markets in 2014: Story Projects" during the Reynolds Center for Business Journalism's annual Business Journalism Week, Jan. 5, 2014. Trennepohl is the ONEOK Chair of Finance at Oklahoma State University.
The annual event features two concurrent seminars, Business Journalism Professors and Strictly Financials for journalists.
For more information about business journalism training, please visit http://businessjournalism.org.
August 14 marks the 80th birthday of the Social Security program, which was established in the Social Security Act of 1935. Over the past 80 years, Social Security has provided important cash benefits and income security to seniors, survivors, individuals with disabilities, and their families – including to nearly 60 million people today. Yet Social Security is on a financially unsustainable course – and is not on track to be able to pay full benefits through its 100th birthday.
Sadly, instead of identifying solutions to prevent depletion of the trust funds, many commenters have relied on myths and half-truths to avoid having a conversation about the necessary choices. In this paper, we identify eight such myths – though there are many more
“From Deficit to Surplus: A Realistic and Achievable Roadmap to make MCDs fin...Rachit Seth
This document provides an overview of the financial challenges facing the three Municipal Corporations of Delhi (MCDs) and proposes strategies to make the MCDs financially self-reliant. It notes that the MCDs are struggling to meet basic objectives due to a lack of funds. The document outlines priorities like improving infrastructure, paying wages to sanitation workers, enhancing primary health and education. It then analyzes factors contributing to the MCDs' deficits like lack of transparency, unrealized revenue potential from property taxes, and proposes solutions like tax reforms, developing land banks, and increasing collections from vendors, tolls and advertisements to achieve a surplus budget within two years.
This document provides an overview of social impact bonds (SIBs). It defines SIBs as multi-stakeholder contracts that pass risk from social program investments from governments to external investors. The structure and stakeholders of a typical SIB project are described. SIB projects from around the world are discussed, including the first SIB in the UK in 2010 and over 25 total projects. Challenges to implementing SIBs in Latin America are then explored, such as high costs, institutional contexts, political issues, and financing difficulties. The document concludes by stating that while SIBs show promise, their high economic costs may not be offset by expected savings in emerging markets.
CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATESCONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICEAlleneMcclendon878
CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES
CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
CBO
Social Security
Policy Options
JULY 2010
Pub. No. 4140
A
S T U D Y
CBO
Social Security Policy Options
July 2010
The Congress of the United States O Congressional Budget Office
CBO
Notes
Unless otherwise noted, all years are calendar years.
Numbers in the text and tables may not add up to totals because of rounding.
Preface
Social Security is the federal government’s largest single program, and as the
U.S. population grows older in the coming decades, its cost is projected to increase more
rapidly than its revenues. As a result, under current law, resources dedicated to the program
will become insufficient to pay full benefits in 2039, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
projects. Long-run sustainability for the program could be attained through various
combinations of raising taxes and cutting benefits; such changes would also affect the
Social Security taxes paid and the benefits received by various groups of people. This CBO
study examines a variety of approaches to changing Social Security, updating an earlier work,
Menu of Social Security Options, which CBO published in May 2005. In keeping with CBO’s
mandate to provide objective, impartial analysis, the current study makes no
recommendations.
The study was written by Noah Meyerson, Charles Pineles-Mark, and Michael Simpson of
CBO’s Health and Human Resources Division, under the direction of Joyce Manchester and
Bruce Vavrichek. Research assistance was provided by Philip Armour, Sarah Axeen, and
L. Daniel Muldoon. James Baumgardner, Sheila Dacey, Benjamin Page, David Rafferty,
Jonathan Schwabish, and Julie Topoleski provided helpful comments on earlier drafts.
Andrew Biggs of the American Enterprise Institute and Paul Van de Water of the Center for
Budget and Policy Priorities also provided useful comments. (The assistance of external
reviewers implies no responsibility for the final product, which rests solely with CBO.)
Kate Kelly edited the manuscript, and Leah Mazade and Sherry Snyder proofread it.
Maureen Costantino took the cover photograph and designed the cover, and Jeanine Rees
prepared the study for publication. Jonathan Schwabish provided help with graphics.
Monte Ruffin produced the initial printed copies, Linda Schimmel coordinated the print
distribution, and Simone Thomas prepared the electronic version for CBO’s Web site
(www.cbo.gov).
Douglas W. Elmendorf
Director
July 2010
CBO
www.cbo.gov
http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=6377
MaureenC
Doug Elmendorf
Contents
Summary ix
Introduction 1
An Overview of Social Security 1
Social Security Projections 4
Assessing Options for Changing Social Security 7
Key Elements of Social Security 8
Scope of the Options 9
Effects of the Options on the System’s Finances 11
Effects of the Options on Payroll Taxes Paid and Benefits Received by
Various Groups 13
Effects of the Options on Work and Saving 15
Options That Wo ...
This document summarizes key topics regarding public pension and other post-employment benefits (OPEB) costs for governments. It discusses that both pensions and OPEBs are long-term benefit promises that require estimating future costs. It also notes that OPEB costs in particular can be highly volatile and extend decades into the future. The document reviews factors like accounting standards, funding levels, investment returns, and benefit changes that impact pension and OPEB costs and sustainability over the long run.
This document discusses a case study of University Hospitals' Vision 2010 program in Cleveland, Ohio, which aimed to leverage the hospital's economic power as an anchor institution to benefit the local community. Key aspects of the program included constructing new medical facilities with a $1.2 billion budget, committing to include many local minority- and women-owned businesses, achieving an economic multiplier effect by spending locally, and creating over 5,000 jobs with $500 million in salaries. The program set diversity, inclusion, and local procurement goals that were largely met and established best practices that continued beyond the program. It demonstrated how anchor institutions can fulfill their role in strengthening their local communities.
The document provides an analysis of the fiscal health of the 75 most populous U.S. cities based on their fiscal year 2018 financial reports. It finds that 63 cities had more debt than money to pay all bills, with a total unfunded debt of $323.2 billion. Unfunded retirement benefits, including $176.2 billion in pension debt and $149.8 billion in other post-employment benefits, were major contributors to the debt. The report ranks the cities based on their "Taxpayer Burden" or "Taxpayer Surplus" and assigns grades based on their financial condition. No cities received an A, 12 received a B, 27 a C, 32 a D, and 4 an F.
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The document discusses key findings from a global survey on pension and retirement systems.
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Mountains of the Mind, Pension Funds greatest challenges in 2013 - Redington ...Redington
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How NYC'S Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
1. REPORT | June 2017
THENEVER-ENDINGHANGOVER
How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
Josh B. McGee
Senior Fellow
Edmund J. McMahon
Adjunct Fellow
2. The Never-Ending Hangover | How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
2
Josh B. McGee is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and vice president of public
accountability at the Laura and John Arnold Foundation. In 2015, he was appointed by Texas
governor Greg Abbott to chair the Texas Pension Review Board until 2021. McGee’s research
on retirement policy, K–12 education, and economic development has been published in
scholarly journals, including Education Finance and Policy, Journal of Development Economics,
and Education Next. His popular writing has appeared in National Affairs, Dallas Morning News,
Philadelphia Inquirer, Atlanta Journal Constitution, and Houston Chronicle. He has provided
expert testimony and technical assistance in more than 50 jurisdictions and routinely speaks to
the media on retirement issues and K–12 policy.
McGee holds a B.S. and an M.S. in industrial engineering and a Ph.D. in economics, all from the
University of Arkansas.
Edmund J. McMahon is an adjunct fellow at the Manhattan Institute and research director of
the Empire Center for Public Policy, a nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank based in Albany, NY. He
writes on regional, state, and local issues, recommending policy changes and reforms to increase
economic growth. McMahon’s work has focused on New York’s unsustainable public pension and
retiree health-care costs, the out-migration of New York residents to other states, and a blueprint
for cutting and restructuring New York’s deficit-ridden state budget. His articles have appeared in
the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, Barron’s, Public Interest, New York Post, New York Daily
News, Newsday, and New York Sun.
About the Authors
4. The Never-Ending Hangover | How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
4
Executive Summary
O
ver the past 15 years, New York City’s budget has been hit with extraordinary and
unprecedented increases in pension costs. Yet the city’s five pension plans remain
significantly underfunded by accepted government accounting standards, posing a
significant risk to New York’s fiscal future.
During Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s 12-year tenure, New York City’s annually required pension contributions
more than quintupled, from $1.4 billion to $8.1 billion. Pension costs have continued rising under Mayor Bill
de Blasio, whose $84.9 billion budget proposal for fiscal 2018 includes pension contributions of $9.6 billion—
an increase of $177 million over the current fiscal year and $1.4 billion (18%) above the level in Bloomberg’s
last budget.
Today, pension contributions stand at a near-record 11% of the city’s total budget—and 36% of payroll alone.
They consume 17% of city tax revenues, double the average proportion of the 1990s and early 2000s. Increas-
ingly, city pension costs crowd out spending on other public services while limiting options for tax relief. Indeed,
New York’s annual pension contributions will soon displace social services as the second-largest spending cate-
gory in the city budget, behind only education, consuming more than 80 cents of every dollar raised by the city’s
personal income tax.
This report reviews some sobering truths about New York City’s pension systems, including:
Despite the sevenfold run-up in annual taxpayer-funded pension contributions since 2002, New York City’s
unfunded pension liabilities officially ballooned to nearly $65 billion in fiscal 2016, up from $60 billion just three
years earlier. More than half of its current pension contributions are required simply to pay down unfunded
pension liabilities.
New York will need at least 15 more years to eliminate its pension debt, even assuming annual average
investment returns of 7%. In other words, a shortfall that can be traced to the early 2000s won’t be paid off until
2032—if the systems’ generous investment assumptions pan out.
When New York’s future stream of pension obligations is discounted using a lower “market value” rate of
interest—as modeled in this report and recommended by most independent actuaries and economists—its real
pension debt soars to $142 billion, more than double the official number.
By our estimate, the city’s five pension systems ended fiscal 2016 with an average funded ratio of 47% on a
market-value basis (i.e., they had less than half the money needed to pay promised benefits). When the city’s
preferred actuarial standard is used, the average funded ratio is still only 66%.
New York City cannot afford to stand pat, accept current pension cost levels as a new normal, and hope for the
best: when the next downturn strikes, it will inflate the pension deficit, creating even bigger burdens and more
difficult choices. In the short term, New York should take two steps. First, reduce overoptimistic investment-re-
turn assumptions, as recommended by independent actuarial consultants in 2015. Second, tap into the large pots
of money that the mayor has reserved for pay raises in the next round of contract settlements to fund the $655
million a year in required additional pension contributions.
The Never-Ending Hangover | How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
5. 5
Introduction
F
or more than a decade, New York City has been diverting ever larger
amounts from its operating budget to bail out its employee pension
systems, or “funds.”1
Forty years ago, it was the other way around.
During the city’s fiscal crisis that erupted in the mid-1970s, the pension funds’ purchase of $3.5
billion in city Municipal Assistance Corp. (MAC) bonds, as well as general-obligation bonds, was
all that stood between the Big Apple and bankruptcy. With the approval of union trustees on the
city’s five pension system boards (see sidebar), MAC and city bonds ultimately represented 35%
of the pension funds’ total assets—which, at the time, were already well short of the amounts
needed to cover future obligations to retirees and beneficiaries.
THENEVER-ENDINGHANGOVER
How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
New York City’s Pension Systems
New York City has five primary pension systems, serving nearly three-quarters of a million active and retired municipal
employees. Although they are usually described collectively in the city budget context, each pension system is financially
independent and has its own board of trustees. The city comptroller’s office serves as investment advisor and custodian of
the systems’ assets. The systems’ boards vary in size and in composition; but all include representatives of the mayor and
the comptroller. On the police and fire pension system boards, the majority of trustees are union appointees—though votes
are weighted in favor of government representatives, including the mayor, police or fire commissioner, and comptroller.
On the other pension boards, regardless of the breakdown among trustees, rules require that no board action can be taken
without the support of at least one management and one labor representative.
Pension System and Current Membership Covered Occupations
New York City Employees’ Retirement System (NYCERS)
• 184,762 active members
• 168,296 pensioners, beneficiaries, others
Civil servants; sanitation workers; corrections officers; MTA transit, bus,
and bridge employees; Housing Authority and Health Hospitals Corp.
employees; appointed and elected officials
Teachers’ Retirement System (TRS)
• 111,762 active members
• 101,470 pensioners, beneficiaries, others
Teachers, administrators, and other education professionals employed in
the city’s public schools
Board of Education Retirement System (BERS)
• 25,182 active members
• 20,195 pensioners, beneficiaries, others
Civil-service workers, provisional and part-time workers in the Education
Department and several other city agencies
New York City Police Pension Fund (PPF)
• 34,402 active members
• 50,153 pensioners, beneficiaries, others
City police officers, including highest uniformed ranks
New York Fire Department Pension Funds (FDPF)
• 10,319 active members
• 16,819 pensioners, beneficiaries, others
City firefighters, including highest uniformed ranks
Total Active Members on Payrolls: 366,427
Total Pensioners, Beneficiaries, and Other Inactive Members: 356,933
Total Members: 723,360
6. The Never-Ending Hangover | How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
6
As of 1978, the city’s pension-funding ratio was barely
50%, with total unfunded pension liabilities estimated
at roughly $10 billion (equivalent to $37 billion today).
James Brigham, the city’s budget director at the time,
sought to assuage the worries of fiscal conservatives in
Congress, which was then considering an extension of
federal loan guarantees to New York. “Over the next
40 years, the city will fund that unfunded accrued li-
ability,” Brigham told the Senate Finance Committee
at a March 1978 hearing. “This is not an uncommon
feature of pension systems, and we are advised that the
funding of an unfunded liability over 40 years is sound
practice.”2
In the end, it didn’t take 40 years. Even when measured
by today’s more exacting actuarial measures, most of
New York City’s unfunded pension liability had been
erased by 2000. But the pension debt would reemerge,
bigger than ever, in the decade that followed.
The Path to Today’s
Pension Crisis
In 1980, when New York was still struggling to get
its finances on a solid footing,
the city’s pension contributions
reached 21% of city tax revenues.
However, as luck would have it,
the early 1980s also represented
the start of one of the most spec-
tacular bull markets in Wall Street
history.
Public pension funds across the
U.S., saddled with large unfunded
liabilities while investing mainly
in safe fixed-income securities,
responded by shifting more and
more of their assets into corpo-
rate stocks. For New York City,
the stock-market boom of 1982–
2000 was especially fortuitous.
Pension investment returns av-
eraged 12.9% a year; during the
same period, Wall Street profits
and bonuses fueled a sharp rise in
tax revenues, interrupted only by
an economic downturn in the early
1990s.
As a percentage of tax revenues,
the city’s pension burden dropped
steadily: from 21% in 1980, to 12%
in 1990, to 7% in 1999. But pension costs would not
remain that low indefinitely (Figure 1).
The New York State legislature, which writes the laws
shaping public pensions across the state, saw pension
funds’ soaring returns in the early 1980s as an invita-
tion to begin sweetening pension benefits. In 1984, the
legislature effectively rolled back the Tier 3 pension
reform of the 1970s, which was designed to save money
by imposing new limits on benefits. Over the next 15
years, more pension increases, benefiting different
categories of public employees in New York City and
across the state, were enacted in Albany.
The fuse on New York City’s latest explosion of pension
costs was lit by the market downturn of 2000–2002,
from which the funds have never fully recovered.
However, investment losses were only partly to blame,
as a subsequent report by the city comptroller’s office
showed.3
Bad policy choices, invariably egged on by
public-employee unions, were also responsible.
Making matters worse, in the spring of 2000, Gover-
nor George Pataki and the state legislature approved
sweeping public pension benefit enhancements that
ultimately resulted in nearly $13 billion in cumula-
tive pension cost increases for the city during 2000–
*Actual and projected totals (left); pension share of city taxes, total budget (right)
Source: Empire Center for Public Policy, based on data from the New York City Comprehensive Annual
Financial Reports and the New York State Financial Control Board
FIGURE 1.
New York City Pension Contributions, 1980–2021*
BILLIONSOFDOLLARSINPENSIONCONTRIBUTIONS
PERCENTOFCITYTAXES
Actual Projected Pensions/Taxes Pensions/Spending
12
10
8
6
4
2
-
1980
1983
1986
1989
1992
1995
1998
2001
2004
2007
2010
2013
2016
2019
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
7. 7
2010.4
The sweeteners, enacted over Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani’s objections, included the elimination of the
employee share of pension contributions for many
workers as well as a partial, automatic, cost-of-living
adjustment in pension benefits.
The Importance of the
Discount Rate
In calculating the long-term liabilities of any pension
fund, the discount rate is a crucial variable: the lower
the rate of assumed earnings on money set aside to pay
promised future benefits, the larger the employer con-
tributions required to maintain “fully funded” status,
defined as assets sufficient to pay all promised benefits
to current members. Private corporate pension plans
in the U.S. are required by federal law to discount lia-
bilities based on a “market” rate—typically, the interest
paid on highly rated corporate bonds, which, in recent
years, have yielded 4%–5%.
This rate is often much lower than the plans’ earn-
ings targets; but it reflects what the money would be
earning if invested in lower-risk assets, matching the
low-risk tolerance of future retirees who are count-
ing on their promised pensions. The expense of fully
funding defined-benefit pension plans on this basis is a
major reason for their gradual disappearance from the
private sector.
Since public pensions are offered as a risk-free prop-
osition to their beneficiaries, most economists, actu-
aries, and financial analysts agree that public pension
fund liabilities should use fair-value accounting (i.e.,
discounting liabilities on the basis of a risk-free or low-
risk market rate, such as the yield on AAA-rated cor-
porate bonds or long-term U.S. Treasury securities).
However, under rules set by the Government Account-
ing Standards Board (GASB), public employers are
allowed to discount their long-term liabilities based on
the rate of return that they hope to earn from invest-
ments.
As noted, public pension funds have chased higher
yields in the form of riskier stock-market investments
(both domestic and global). This fuels a negative cycle:
pension funds need replenishment when states are
struggling to emerge from recessions, which often co-
incide with stock-market downturns. The stock-mar-
ket volatility of the past 15 years has exposed serious
fiscal fault lines in America’s public pension sector.
By relying on inflated discount rates—reflecting the
long-term average of past asset returns but failing to
account for short-term volatility or market risk—state
and local pension funds across America have obscured
the true size of their liabilities. New York City has been
no exception. Even so, in several crucial respects the city
has been less reckless and, until recently, more trans-
parent than any other large U.S. public pension plan
sponsor. In other words, while lax government account-
ing standards contributed to the building of huge public
pension debts throughout the U.S., the pension crisis
that New York City now faces is ultimately due more to
the sheer scale of its pension promises than to any egre-
gious abuse of accounting standards.
New York’s assumed rate of return had been 8% for
more than a decade5
before it was reduced in 2012 to
7%, one of the biggest rate reductions adopted by any
major public pension plan up to that time. The change
was strongly supported by Mayor Michael Bloomberg—
although Bloomberg noted that banking on 7% returns
would still be considered “indefensible” by private-sec-
tor standards. “If somebody offers you a guaranteed 7%
on your money for the rest of your life, you take it and
just make sure the guy’s name is not Madoff,” the mayor
said.6
However, an immediate switch to the 7% assumption
also would have required an immediate $2.8 billion
boost in the pension contribution.7
To lessen the impact
on current budgets, the transition was “amortized,”
spreading the costs into the future.
Most pension plans amortize their unfunded liabili-
ties over a period of about 30 years and also reset their
payment schedule each year, a technique known as open
amortization. New York City, however, chose an “in-
creasing dollar amortization method,” increasing pay-
ments by 3% a year over a closed 22-year period, based
on the 2010 actuarial estimate of liabilities and reflected
in contributions starting in fiscal 2012. It also adopted
“level dollar amortization,” a strategy in which pension
debts realized in any subsequent year are amortized
using level payments over a closed 15-year period.
Amortizing each year’s pension gain or loss over fixed
periods is called “layered amortization”: for each sub-
sequent year, the sponsor could potentially pay off
another layer of pension debt. An advantage of this ap-
proach is that it is more responsive to each year’s gain or
loss, and it keeps plan sponsors from accumulating too
much debt.
Starting in 2003, as part of the information attached to
the comprehensive annual financial reports of the city’s
five pension systems, Chief Actuary Robert C. North,
8. The Never-Ending Hangover | How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
8
Jr. included an expanded table of alternative measures
of funded status—including, crucially, a ratio compar-
ing the market value of assets with the market value ac-
cumulated benefit obligation (MVABO). As North later
explained: “[T]he MVABO is calculated by projecting
the accrued portion of benefits (i.e., the benefits earned
to date without use of future salary increases or benefit
service credits, allowing eligibility service to grow) and
discounting at each payment date those accrued ben-
efits using discount rates equal to U.S. Treasury spot
yields.”8
Estimating the current value of all future pension
promises based on U.S. Treasury bond yields, which
for many years have been well below 7%, essentially
recognized that pension liabilities have characteristics
similar to traded securities that promise a fixed payoff
to investors. What would the promise of a guaranteed
stream of pension income be worth, in current terms,
if traded in securities markets? The MVABO essential-
ly provided a collective answer to that question for the
entire New York City workforce.
The actuarial measures used to determine the city’s
pension contribution showed growing and sizable
pension liabilities. But North’s mark-to-market alter-
native valuations revealed that the true pension debt
was growing much larger, especially after the financial
crisis of 2008.
For example, as of 2012, the official measure showed
an average funded ratio of 61%, from a high of 66% for
the New York City Employees’ Retirement System, to
52% for the Fire Department Pension Funds. However,
the MVABO revealed an average ratio of 36%, with the
Fire Department at an alarmingly low 28%.
Meanwhile, effective in 2013 for cities such as New
York, GASB Statement 67 imposed new rules requiring
pension funds to report “net pension liabilities” based
on the fair-market value of their total assets available
to fund benefits. Combined with the city actuary’s alter-
native measures, as well as other improved reporting
requirements and changes to actuarial assumptions,
the new GASB rules have shined a light on the extent of
New York’s true shortfall.
Beyond the Happy Talk
After losing 23% in the market downturn of 2007–09,
the city’s pension funds reported double-digit returns
in four of the next five years, including 17.4% in 2014.
City Comptroller Scott Stringer hailed this “good news”
and said that it would allow the city to “save” nearly
$18 billion in contributions over the next 20 years. But
the fund earned only 3.15% in fiscal 2015, followed by
just 1.46% in 2016.
The average of those wildly varying numbers was an
annual return of 7.1% from 2013 to 2016—slightly more
than the city’s assumed rate of return. Nonetheless, the
city’s net pension liability ended up increasing, from
about $60 billion in fiscal 2013 to about $65 billion last
year (Figure 2).
What next? It is possible that New York City’s pension
systems will meet or exceed their target; it is also possi-
ble that they won’t. As of February 17, the city’s pension
systems had earned about 8.3% in fiscal 2017, accord-
ing to the deputy state comptroller’s office.9
However,
this gain was fueled by a postelection stock-market
surge that stalled in late March. Even a year-end gain
slightly above 7% will barely make a dent in the net li-
ability.
The city’s five pension systems will ultimately recover
to fully funded status within the next 10 to 20 years—
without putting more pressure on the city budget—only
if financial and policy outcomes throughout the period
are consistent with this optimistic scenario:
1. Investment returns average 7% a year
2. Public pension benefits are not increased
Source: New York City Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports
FIGURE 2.
Net Pension Liability (USD, millions)
2013
59,941
2014 2015 2016
FISCAL YEAR
49,958
53,124
64,836
9. 9
Based on historical experience, this optimistic sce-
nario almost certainly will not happen. If pension
fund returns are stronger than expected, perennially
meeting or even exceeding the 7% target in the short
term, public-employee unions will almost certainly
lobby for benefit increases. Indeed, they can be expect-
ed to do so regardless of pension fund returns or rising
pension debt.
In recent years, the state legislature has also passed
several sweeteners, including a bill that would restore
early retirement options for uniformed state court
officers that had been eliminated as part of the Tier
6 pension reform enacted in 2012. Even if initially
limited to a small group of employees, such a change
would surely incite a flood of similar proposals that
would further inflate pension obligations. Governor
Cuomo has vetoed all these bills, but the legislature will
surely continue to reintroduce them.
Last year, Cuomo signed bills restoring disability pen-
sions equal to 75% of final average salary for New
York City firefighters, corrections officers, and sanita-
tion workers hired since 2009,10
reflecting side deals
reached in contract talks between Mayor de Blasio and
the unions representing those employees.11
The added
benefit required an immediate increase in firefighter
pension contributions of $6 million, which will grow
to $12.6 million by 2021. (The corrections-officer and
sanitation-worker benefits are supposed to be fully
self-financed through member contributions, while the
firefighter benefit will be funded partly by the city.) A
similar disability pension benefit restoration was in-
cluded in the newly ratified contract between the city
and the Police Benevolent Association (PBA).
While firefighters, corrections officers, and sanitation
workers affected by the deal are expected to contrib-
ute an extra 2% of salaries to help pay for the added
benefit—and affected PBA members are to pay an extra
1.5% of salary—the cost calculations associated with
the disability-benefit increases are based on the under-
lying actuarial assumption of 7% pension fund returns.
City officials remain likely to seize on short-term im-
provements in pension-funding ratios as evidence
that the pension systems pose less of a threat to the
city’s long-term financial stability. But even when
annual returns fell short of the 7% mark in the last few
years, there was a notable lack of urgency surrounding
the pension issue—perhaps because city leaders, the
media, and the public have failed to focus on the true
dimensions of New York’s pension debt.
More Disclosure Needed
The true extent of New York’s pension debt became
clearer once the city’s chief actuary began to disclose
alternative measures of liabilities calculated on the
basis of a low, risk-free, market rate of interest. But
after North retired in 2014, the city pension systems
stopped releasing those estimates. His successor,
Sherry Chan, provided this explanation for the change:
“The calculation of market value ratios are outside the
statutory duties of the OA [Office of Actuary] and, due
to the short-term volatility and inherent unreliability
of such ratios, they do not provide a useful measure of
mandated funding requirements. Therefore, public re-
sources are not used to publish such measurements.”12
Chan’s statement is out of step with a growing con-
sensus among economists, financial analysts, and ac-
tuaries who have studied public pension funding. For
example, in a widely heralded 2014 report, the Blue
Ribbon Panel of the Society of Actuaries recommended
that to help stakeholders make informed, effective de-
cisions about funding, financial benchmarks disclosed
by public pension plans should include “the plan lia-
bility and normal cost calculated at the risk-free rate,
which estimates the investment risk being taken in the
investment earnings assumption.”13
New York City’s pension systems once led the way on
pension disclosure. Now, with no objection from the
mayor or the other elected officials who serve on their
boards of trustees, the funds have become unhelpfully
opaque. However, using the data published in the com-
prehensive annual financial reports for the city and its
pension systems, it is possible to estimate a market
value of pension liabilities—and to compare the result-
Source: Authors’ estimates, based on City of New York, FY 2016 Comprehensive
Annual Financial Report and the city’s annual pension fund reports
Plan
Current
Actuarial Rate
(7%)
1% Decrease in
Current Liability
Discount Rate
(6%)
Market Rate
(3.61%)
TRS 25,600 32,714 52,092
PPF 15,638 21,344 37,039
FDPF 8,906 11,203 17,563
NYCERS 13,307 18,246 31,968
BERS 1,384 1,948 3,533
TOTAL $64,836 $85,454 $142,195
FIGURE 3.
Alternative Measures of New York City
Pension Debt (USD, millions)
10. The Never-Ending Hangover | How New York City’s Pension Costs Threaten Its Future
10
ing estimate of true pension debt with the unfunded
liability estimates produced using the GASB 67 rules
(see Appendix).
As of 2016, the true size of New York City’s pension
debt was $142 billion (Figure 3). The pension system
shortfall is 17% of gross city product—71% more than
the city’s total bonded indebtedness and 78% more
than city taxes will raise next year (Figure 4).
Conclusion
From 2014 through fiscal 2017, for the first time on
record, New York City’s pension contributions exceed-
ed actual and projected (mostly bond-financed) capital
expenditures. In other words, the city has been spend-
ing more to meet its pension obligations than to build
and renovate bridges, parks, schools, and other public
assets. In fiscal 2018, roughly 57% of contributions will
be needed simply to continue paying down what the
city still owes its pension systems, in order to contin-
ue paying benefits promised to retirees. The rest will
cover the “normal” cost of added benefits earned by
city employees. In other words, if the pension systems
had been fully funded in the past, the city would have
saved more than $5 billion.
Since 2000, the total asset value of the city’s five
pension systems rose by about 50%, from $106 billion
to $165 billion. During the same period, the outflow of
benefit payments more than doubled, from $5.5 billion
in fiscal 2000 to nearly $13 billion in fiscal 2016. The
only guarantee associated with New York City pension
funding—a guarantee backed by the state constitu-
tion—is that those benefit payments, driven by the
rising salaries and life expectancies of city employees,
will continue rising.
Ideally, the city should aim to shorten the amortization
period for remaining liabilities, reduce the assumed
rate of return, or do both. The real-world costs of such
actions are daunting:
• Paying off the debt within 10 years instead of the
scheduled 15, while keeping a 7% discount rate,
would cost $2.2 billion more a year—over and above
current projected levels.
• Maintaining a 15-year payoff period but reducing
the discount rate to 6% would boost the contribu-
tion by $3.7 billion per year.
• Bringing the assumed return in line with a market
rate of 3.61% across a 15-year payoff period would
cost an extra $7 billion a year.
There is another, less expensive, option for at least
slightly increasing the rate at which the city pays down
its pension debt. In an October 2015 report, based on
the charter-mandated biannual performance audit of
the pension systems, the city’s independent actuarial
consultants recommended a reduction in the assumed
rate of return on investments, to 6.75% from 7%.14
Even that slight change of 25 basis points would add
$655 million a year to pension contributions, according
to the consultants’ estimates. That’s still a lot of money.
But chipping away faster at the enormous unfunded
pension liability is the only way to reduce what other-
wise looms as a serious threat to New York’s future.
As it happens, enough money to cover the added con-
tribution has been squirreled away in Mayor de Blasio’s
fiscal 2017 financial plan, in the form of a collective
bargaining reserve to cover pay raises for city employ-
ees in the next round of union contracts. Excluding a
lump-sum payment owed to unions under prior con-
tracts, the available amounts grow from $946 million
in fiscal 2018 to $1.3 billion in 2021.
New Yorkers have forgone billions of dollars a year
in services, infrastructure improvements, and poten-
Source: Authors’ estimates, based on City of New York, FY 2016 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report
In Millions
Current Actuarial
Rate (7%)
1% Decrease in Current Liability
Discount Rate (6%)
Market Rate
(3.61%)
Bonded Indebtedness $82,929 78% 103% 171%
City Taxes $53,621 121% 159% 265%
General Fund Expenditures $79,981 81% 107% 178%
Gross City Product $856,000 8% 10% 17%
FIGURE 4.
New York City Pension Debt Relative to Various Measures
11. 11
tial tax savings to back up the state’s constitutional
guarantee of generous pensions for city employees.
Since pensions are an integral element of employee
compensation, a strong argument can be made that
it’s time for city workers themselves to pitch in and
help backfill the amounts still needed to make their
pension systems whole again—before the pension
hole inevitably grows deeper.
Appendix
To estimate New York City’s pension plans’ liabilities
using different discount rates, we use each plan’s stated
liability number as well as additional information re-
quired by the GASB 67 on the value of those liabilities
using different rates. Each pension plan reports, in its
comprehensive annual financial report, the present
discounted value of its benefit commitments to workers
(i.e., liabilities). For New York City’s plans, these liabil-
ities are valued using a 7% discount rate. In addition,
GASB 67 requires that plans report liabilities valued
using discount rates that are +/- 1 percentage point
from their chosen discount rate. In New York City’s
case, this means providing the value of liabilities using
a 6% and 8% discount rate, respectively. Having the
plans’ liabilities valued at different rates allows us to
estimate the average duration of those liabilities—i.e.,
the average length of time over which those benefits
would be paid.
Having calculated the average duration of each plan’s
liabilities, we can then estimate the value of liabilities
at different discount rates by compounding the plan’s
stated liability number at the plan’s discount rate over
the estimated average duration; and discounting the
resulting future value back over the same estimated
average duration, using our chosen discount rate.
Our market-rate calculation was based on a rate of
3.61%, as listed in the Citigroup Pension Discount
Curve and Liability Index for plan fiscal years ending
June 30, 2016. The Citi Index is a common benchmark
used by analysts and credit-rating agencies, including
Moody’s Investors Service, to discount pension liabili-
ties for purposes of comparing the funded status of dif-
ferent plans.15
Endnotes
1 Officially, the “pension system” is the entity paying benefits and keeping records, while the “pension fund” is the investment vehicle. In practice,
“system” and “fund” are used interchangeably.
2 “New York City Pension Plan Investments,” U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, Mar. 1978, p. 47.
3 “The $8 Billion Question: An Analysis of NYC Pension Costs over the Past Decade,” New York City Comptroller, Apr. 2011, p. 2.
4 Ibid.
5 The rate had previously been 8.75% from 1996 to 1999, after peaking at 9% from 1991 to 1995.
6 Mary Williams Walsh and Danny Hakim, “Public Pensions Faulted for Bets on Rosy Returns,” New York Times, May 27, 2012.
7 The New York State and Local Retirement System, which covers state and local employees outside New York City, lowered its rate from 8% to 7.5%
in 2010, and to 7% in 2015. The New York State Teachers’ Retirement System lowered its discount rate from 8% to 7.5% in 2015. As of 2015, the
median rate for public pension systems was 7.5%.
8 Robert C. North, Jr., “Presenting Market Value Liabilities for Public Employee Retirement Systems,” Society of Actuaries, The Pension Forum 21 (2017): 68.
9 Thomas DiNapoli and Kenneth B. Bleiwas, “Review of the Financial Plan of the City of New York,” New York State Comptroller, Mar. 2017, p. 23.
10 The benefits were reduced for future hires when then-governor David Paterson vetoed a previously routine extender of the pension benefit “tiers” that
had covered all police and firefighters hired since the early 1970s.
11 New York State law prohibits collective bargaining of pension benefits; but mayors and public-employee unions nonetheless have periodically agreed to
jointly ask the legislature to approve pension benefit increases laid out in memorandums attached to labor contracts.
12 Mar. 17, 2017, e-mail message to E. J. McMahon from New York City’s Office of the Actuary—quoted with permission.
13 “Report of the Blue Ribbon Panel on Public Plan Funding,” Society of Actuaries, Feb. 2014, p. 7. Members of the panel included North, then
completing his tenure as New York’s chief actuary, and former New York lieutenant governor Richard Ravitch.
14 “New York City Retirement Systems: Actuarial Audit and Related Review Services, Independent Actuary’s Statement,” Gabriel, Roeder, Smith Co.,
Oct. 2015, p. 2.
15 “Citi Pension Discount Curve,” Society of Actuaries.
12. June 2017
REPORT 41
Abstract
New York City’s pension contributions stand at a near-record 11% of the
city’s total budget—and 35% of payroll alone. They consume 17% of city
tax revenues, double the average proportion of the 1990s and early 2000s.
Increasingly, city pension costs crowd out spending on other public services
while limiting options for tax relief. Indeed, New York’s annual pension
contributions will soon displace social services as the second-largest
spending category in the city budget, behind only education, consuming
more than 80 cents of every dollar raised by the city’s personal income tax.
New York City cannot afford to stand pat, accept current pension cost levels
as a new normal, and hope for the best: when the next downturn strikes,
it will inflate the pension deficit, creating even bigger burdens and more
difficult choices. In the short term, New York should take two steps. First,
reduce overoptimistic investment-return assumptions, as recommended by
independent actuarial consultants in 2015. Second, tap into the large pots
of money that the mayor has reserved for pay raises in the next round of
contract settlements to fund the $655 million a year in required additional
pension contributions.