This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.

Wisconsin’s Public Pension Problems?

Leo Kolivakis's picture




 

Via Pension Pulse.

Dan Bigman of Forbes wants to remind you Wisconsin’s Public Pension Problems Are Your Problem, Too. But are they really or is this more fear mongering? Zach Carter of the Huffington Post reports, Wisconsin's Pension Fund Among Nation's Healthiest:

While Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) has painted a dire picture of his state's pension obligations, Wisconsin's pension fund for public employees is among the nation's strongest, according to a report by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center*.

The Pew report, issued last year, concluded that Wisconsin is a "national leader in managing its long-term liabilities for both pension and retiree health care." Walker has cited the fund's lack of sustainability as grounds for his plan to revoke collective bargaining rights for state employees, but that proposal has sparked outrage among state employees and drawn tens of thousands of protesters to the state's capitol.

 

"We're going to ask our state and local workers ... to pay a little bit more, to sacrifice, to help to balance this budget," Walker said in a Sunday interview with Fox News' Chris Wallace, adding that he would be forced to lay off 5,000 to 6,000 state employees if his budget plan was not approved, as well as a comparable number of local public employees.

 

But the Wisconsin pension fund is simply not in fiscal trouble. Its managers weren't burned by subprime mortgage assets or mortgage-backed securities as the housing bubble collapsed. The fund also relies on an automated dividend system, which pays out benefits in years the system is making gains while restricting payouts in years when it takes losses. And while the pension fund had a rough year during 2008 due to stock market losses, it remains robust, both in terms of fundamental financial stability and in comparison to other state pension programs.

 

According to the Pew study, Wisconsin had about $77 billion in total pension liabilities in 2008. But according to that same Pew study, those liabilities were 99.67 percent "funded," giving Wisconsin one of the four-highest of such ratios in the nation. Other states had funding ratios as low as 54 percent. For comparison, expert analysts and the Government Accountability Office consider an 80 percent level to be a good benchmark for pension fund stability, while Fitch Ratings considers 70 percent adequate.

 

Pension accounting relies on a very long-term outlook. When the state calculates its pension liabilities, it adds up the total expected pension expenditures for the entire lifetimes of everybody currently receiving a pension and all employees expected to receive pensions. That outlook routinely eclipses 30 years, depending on the ages of state employees. A $77 billion liability is only a problem if the state has no realistic way of meeting those expenses over that 30-plus year timeframe. But the Wisconsin pension system actually does have the vast majority of that money -- in fact, in 2008, the pension fund had 99.67 percent percent of that $77 billion total on hand. If all of the assets in the fund had simply been sold at market values on June 30, the resulting cash would have been enough to pay 99.67 percent of the state's total pension payouts for decades to come.

 

According to the Wisconsin pension fund's own 2010 annual report, the system had $69.1 billion in total assets at June 30, 2010, while paying out $3.7 billion in benefits over the course of the previous year. The value of those assets has since risen. According to Dave Stella, secretary of the Wisconsin Department of Employee Trust Funds, the retirement system's assets were worth $79.8 billion at the end of last month. The most recent solvency test for the fund was conducted for the fund's operations at Dec. 31, 2009. At the time, the funding ratio was 99.8 percent. The next solvency test is scheduled for June of this year.

 

So while Wisconsin does face a $137 million budget shortfall this year, the source of that fiscal trouble is not the state's pension fund. Under the current plan, Walker hopes to generate $30 million this year by raising taxes on public employees -- the governor refers to this as increasing the "contribution" that state employees make to their pension funds.

 

But Walker could make the state's pension system bear the costs of a broader state budget shortfall -- one created almost entirely by lower tax revenues resulting from the economic downturn -- without raising taxes on public workers or eliminating public bargaining rights. All he has to do is cut a few ties with the financial-services industry.

 

According to the pension fund's 2010 report, the fund spends about 84 percent of its management costs on outside help -- highly-compensated fund managers who work for private-sector financial firms. While Wisconsin has made a concerted effort to bring more of its fund management in-house, it could do more.

 

In 2009, roughly half of the pension fund's total assets were managed by state employees, who were paid a total of $28.4 million for their work. By contrast, outside Wall Street professionals were paid $194.7 million to manage the other half of the fund's assets. Cutting Wall Street pay, or simply moving more fund management in-house, could easily generate the $30 million in new taxes Walker wants to assess on state employees.

 

Wisconsin accounts for its pension fund assets using "mark-to-market" accounting. That means that while the state often expects to hold its assets indefinitely, collecting interest payments until the assets expire, it can't simply add up those expected interest payments to determine the value of an asset. Instead, the fund can only say that the asset is worth what other investors are willing to pay for it at a given moment. If investors want to pay less than the future interest payments, that's too bad for Wisconsin.

 

While some accounting experts say this market-oriented accounting is a more honest and accurate way to represent asset values than other methods, U.S. corporations are often allowed much more lenient accounting standards. During the financial crisis, for instance, many banks balked at the suggestion that they be required to account for subprime mortgage bonds at the prices that people were actually willing to pay for them. Instead, they argued, banks should be allowed to account for these items based on secret company economic models. If Wisconsin and other pension funds were simply cut the same slack that the government cut for Wall Street, it's easy to imagine pension fund worries easing, even in states whose pension situations are more dire.

 

[*Correction: Sarah Jorgenson of The Pew Charitable Trusts sent me this correction: We saw your Wisconsin pensions article today and wanted to flag an inacurracy. Zach Carter of the Huffington Post misattributed Pew's report, "The Trillion Dollar Gap," to The Pew Research Center. The report was issued by The Pew Center on the States, a division of The Pew Charitable Trusts. The Pew Research Center is a separate, independent subsidiary.]

I agree with Mr. Carter, public pension funds should be cut some slack but in some cases like in Oklahoma where state Treasurer Ken Miller warned that state pensions are at a "crisis level", more drastic reforms need to be taken.

I also agree that Wisconsin's pension fund is in decent shape and they should move more assets
in-house to save some fees. On that front, I noticed that Wisconsin's public pension fund recently made its first investment in a hedge fund, allocating $100 million to Capula Investment Management. This might be because they don't have internal expertise to implement such a strategy but they can cut fees elsewhere.

You'll also recall that Wisconsin leveraged up its bond portfolio, a strategy that others were tinkering with. If done properly, it can be a source of leveraged beta by ramping up fixed income to get equity-like returns, but it can also present additional risks that will come back to haunt them. Pensions should carefully think through the ramifications of implementing such a strategy.

Finally, state workers across the US are understandably worried about what's going on in Wisconsin (watch video below). As labour unrest spreads, expect some major showdowns ahead. This has the potential to get very ugly, very quickly.

 

- advertisements -

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Wed, 02/23/2011 - 11:38 | 988491 csmith
csmith's picture

"...and then transfer wealth to corporations."

 

Isn't the reverse of this (supposedly heinous) activity known as...TAXES?

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 11:50 | 988534 PD Quig
PD Quig's picture

Wait a minute: you forgot the connection to GW Bushitler. I know you'll think of what it is in a minute...

How about the Occam's Razor explanation: public employee unions have coerced their members, corrupted politicians, and hijacked the taxpayer's wallets to feather their own nest. WI is just the tip of the iceberg and it will not stop until the abomination of public employee unions is over.

Get used to it. It is not political. It is simple financial arithmetic.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 16:23 | 990048 SRV - ES339
SRV - ES339's picture

useful idiot

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 18:20 | 990576 Gene Parmesan
Gene Parmesan's picture

Too funny - somebody must have learned a new phrase today.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 16:22 | 990043 SRV - ES339
SRV - ES339's picture

useful idiot

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 14:31 | 989470 PhatKatBanker
PhatKatBanker's picture

Fucking a right PD Quig.  Thank you for saying it so i didn't have to. 

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 13:24 | 989003 midtowng
midtowng's picture

All evidence to the contrary.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 13:13 | 988945 dark pools of soros
dark pools of soros's picture

so financial math only needs to be true against public unions?  Have you looked at any other mark to unicorns lately?  Why start there?  OHH  breaking up the last segment that is unified..  hmm that seems like more your agenda than any fiscal sanity

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 13:25 | 989014 midtowng
midtowng's picture

+111

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 13:05 | 988894 ATM
ATM's picture

+1

The fight to save collective bargaining rights for public employee unions is the fight to protect the ability to rape and steal from tax payers. fuck these communists thieving ass-holes. Thay are exactly what they think it is that they hate. Ask anyone of them if they agree with socialism, communism and they will all say the same thing - of course not! But ask them if they are for every pillar of those bankrupt theories and they will say - of course!

 

bring the Molotov Cocktails to State St. ! I'm on my way.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 11:32 | 988460 flattrader
flattrader's picture

Forgot to add-

http://videocafe.crooksandliars.com/heather/walker-paying-back-koch-brot...

Wisconsin is a nice place to hunt and fish.  It has a long tradition of environmental protection supported by both end of the political spectrum.

If regulatory capture and transfer of assets succeed, expect the Koch Brothers and their ilk to wreck havoc.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 15:11 | 989676 flattrader
flattrader's picture

Direct quote from Walker who got punked by a journalist on the telephone pretending to be a Koch brother.

The conversation continues: the other man talks about his plans to threaten workers with layoffs, about sowing divisions between the public sector and private sector unions, and the potential for their union busting efforts to spread to other states. "This is our moment," he tells Murphy when Murphy describes him as "the first domino."

This is priceless.  You can't make this up.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/23/scott-walker-buffalo-beast-phon...

I can't wait until the Daily Show or Colbert get a hold of this.

It gets better--

On the matter of Walker saying the same things in private as he does in public, I'm not so sure that's true! As David Weigel points out, it would appear that Walker revealed his "crisis-ending ruse" to Murphy:

 

WALKER: You've got a few of the radical ones -- unfortunately, one of them's the minority leader -- but most of the rest of them are just looking for a way to get out of this. They're scared out of their minds. They don't know what it means. There's a bunch of recalls up against them. They'd really like to just get back up here and get it over with. So the paycheck thing, some of the other things threatening them, I think collectively there's enough going on, and as long as they don't think I'm going to cave, which again we have no interest in. An interesting idea that was brought up to me by my chief of staff, we won't do it until tomorrow, is putting out an appeal to the Democratic leader. I would be willing to sit down and talk to him, the assembly Democrat leader, plus the other two Republican leaders--talk, not negotiate and listen to what they have to say if they will in turn--but I'll only do it if all 14 of them will come back and sit down in the state assembly. They can recess it... the reason for that, we're verifying it this afternoon, legally, we believe, once they've gone into session, they don't physically have to be there. If they're actually in session for that day, and they take a recess, the 19 Senate Republicans could then go into action and they'd have quorum because it's turned out that way. So we're double checking that. If you heard I was going to talk to them that's the only reason why. We'd only do it if they came back to the capitol with all 14 of them. My sense is, hell. I'll talk. If they want to yell at me for an hour, I'm used to that. I can deal with that. But I'm not negotiating.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 15:27 | 989757 flattrader
flattrader's picture

Walker considers using false flag violence to further his agenda.

http://www.thedailypage.com/daily/article.php?article=32414

Murphy [posing as David Koch] offers to help Walker out by "planting some troublemakers" among the demonstrators.

 

Walker's reply:

 

"We thought about that.... "

 

Unfuckingbelievable.

This is what the playbook looks like.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 17:30 | 990200 Bicycle Repairman
Bicycle Repairman's picture

"This is what the playbook looks like."

Coming to a state near you.  Read "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" by John Perkins for the full story.  It was funny when it happened to brown and black people.

Wed, 02/23/2011 - 11:07 | 988339 Sophist Economicus
Sophist Economicus's picture

All nails will do when all you have is a hammer....

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!