Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Pension promises

- The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

GOVERNMENT union chiefs often blame the nation’s looming public pension crisis on the failure of politician­s to properly fund the benefits. A new study, however, reveals that a major problem is the tendency of elected officials to offer more and more goodies courtesy of the taxpayers.

The analysis, by Illinois-based Wirepoints, looked at state pension data from 2003-2016 and found it is “the uncontroll­ed growth in pension promises that’s actually wreaking havoc.” The growth in “accrued liabilitie­s has been extreme in many states, often growing two to three times faster than the pace of their economies,” Wirepoints concluded. “It’s no wonder taxpayer contributi­ons haven’t been able to keep up.”

Nevada finished high on the list of problem states. Between 2003 and 2016, the benefits promised Silver State public-sector retirees increased 148 percent, the study found. Economic growth in the state registered at 61 percent over the same period. During the 14-year window, Nevada experience­d the nation’s fifth-highest “growth in promises.”

Some of the increases in accrued liabilitie­s can be attributed to unusually low interest rates during the period studied. But until lawmakers in Nevada and elsewhere stop buying votes from the powerful government unions through overly generous defined-benefit public pension plans funded by average taxpayers, the problem will continue to worsen.

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