retirement funding status and trends: rough seas ahead elizabeth kellar, president/ceo center for...

24
Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence www.slge.org May 19, 2010

Upload: autumn-johnston

Post on 27-Mar-2015

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead

Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEOCenter for State and Local Government Excellence

www.slge.orgMay 19, 2010

Page 2: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

The Current Economic Picture

• Sustained fiscal constraints for states and localities

• Looming workforce challenges

• Unfunded liabilities

• Federal deficit looms

• Major changes ahead

Page 3: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

The Perfect Storm

Page 4: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

The Not-So-Great Recession

• Economic downturn continues for state governments thru 2010 and 2011

• All sources of revenue are down: income, sales, property taxes

• Federal deficit looms

• Regional differences

Page 5: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

http://www.cbpp.org/files/9-8-08sfp.pdf [Center on Budget and Policy Priorities]

Page 6: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

THE CURRENT HUMAN RESOURCE REALITY

State and local governments feel the squeeze

Page 7: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May
Page 8: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May
Page 9: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Competing for Talent

• Good benefits help recruit and retain employees

• But reductions in benefits are today’s reality• 70% have increased employee contributions

to health care• 18% require new workers to contribute more

to pension plan; 8% increased years required to vest in plan

Page 10: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

45.0%

11.0%

40.2%

2008 Private Sector

No pension plan at work

Pension plan at work, but not included

Included in pension plan at work

18.3%

8.9%

70.9%

2008 State and Federal Government

No pension plan at work

Pension plan at work, but not included

Included in pension plan at work

18.1%

8.1%

71.7%

2008 Local Government

No pension plan at work

Pension plan at work, but not included

Included in pension plan at work

Who has a pension?

From: Current Population Survey

Page 11: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Retirement Delays

Page 12: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

The Status of State and Local Plans in 2009

Research Team

Alicia H. Munnell, Jean-Pierre Aubry, and Laura, Quinby

Center for Retirement Research

at Boston College

Page 13: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Key Findings

• Most pensions were over 80 percent funded in 2008

• In 2009, only 36 percent of plans studied were over 80% funded

• Most pension plans will not return to 80 percent funding levels by 2013 unless contribution levels increase

Page 14: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Public and Private Plans

• Invest about 70% of their assets in equities

• Were 80-90% funded

Page 15: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May
Page 16: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May
Page 17: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May
Page 18: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Crystal Ball Projections

• Most likely: 2010 actuarial reports will show assets equal to ~77% of promised benefits; by 2013, ratio will drop to 72%

• The pessimistic ratio for 2013 is 66%

• The optimistic ration for 2013 is 76%

Page 19: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

What are plan sponsors doing?

• Louisiana extended the amortization period to 2040

• Vermont extended its funding period to 2039

• California expanded the corridor on the actuarial value of assets to moderate the required increase in the ARC.

Page 20: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

Page 21: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

The Public Debate

• What rewards are appropriate for a career of public service?

• Are years to vest in plan appropriate?

• How are new hires treated?

• What should the “normal” retirement age be?

Page 22: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Political Issues

• Generation equity• Transparency• Management challenges with lower

tiers of benefits for new hires• Hybrid plans• Competition with other demands• Who pays?

Page 23: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

Government Retirement Plans Could Be Models for Private Sector

• Employees contribute to retirement

• Retirement security is a priority

• Take a long view

• Professional management assets are the norm

• Should private sector employees be allowed to buy into public plans?

Page 24: Retirement Funding Status and Trends: Rough Seas Ahead Elizabeth Kellar, President/CEO Center for State and Local Government Excellence  May

For a copy of Center’s free research publications, visit:

www.slge.org