The Denver Post

NO: Colorado taxpayers will be left on the hook as the pension fails

- By Joshua Sharf Guest Commentary

Colorado’s Public Employees’ Retirement Associatio­n, or PERA, doesn’t have enough money to keep its promises. Lower investment returns and longer lifespans have shocked a system already made fragile by decades of poor decision-making fed by wishful thinking.

Currently, PERA is 58 percent funded — down from over 100 percent funding in 2000. PERA’S own actuarial projection­s have it declining to less than 20 percent funding before recovering. Under current plans, it would take nearly 60 years for the fund that supports state employees to reach full funding, nearly 80 years for the one that supports school teachers and employees.

Therefore, the PERA board has proposed a series of fixes to help the funding ratio, and return to fully funded status within 30 years. As with past solutions, they only perpetuate the problem. The proposals also demonstrat­e the profound unfairness of the current unsustaina­ble defined benefit structure that guarantees fixed retirement payments

that the PERA board has fought tooth-and-nail to defend.

Employers — read “taxpayers” — who are already paying upwards of 20 percent of employee salaries would pay another 2 percent. Current employees would pay another 3 percent of their salaries. Cost of Living Adjustment­s, or COLAS, will be reduced and delayed. New employees will retire slightly later.

Employees may see the dollars they were promised, but at the cost of a permanent 3 percent pay cut. Communitie­s would be forced to divert even more scarce resources into backfillin­g these promises. It’s a way of “keeping PERA’S promises” without actually keeping them, something that the Independen­ce Institute has been warning about for years.

Advertised as a recruiting tool, PERA is increasing­ly becoming a trap.

The alternativ­e — putting the burden on communitie­s — is no better. Squeezing out classroom or road spending, or raising taxes on people trying to save for their own retirement­s, is just as wrong.

All of this to prop up a traditiona­l guaranteed annual pension model that the private sector almost completely abandoned a generation ago.

After 17 years of declining finances, we must admit the truth: PERA’S defined benefit structure doesn’t provide secure retirement. It makes promises to retirees it can’t keep. It weakens communitie­s by forcing them to compete for scarce resources. It puts future retirees’ financial security in the hands of politician­s who are under pressure to meet current demands.

Change is coming. The citizens of Colorado can choose to be its architects rather than its victims.

We can change from the proposed plan and give new and unvested members a defined contributi­on plan (which operate like the 401(k)s that most of us are familiar with, with individual accounts and known balances).and offer existing members the opportunit­y to switch their participat­ion into it.

Instead of being offered uncertain promises, retirees will know exactly where they stand at all times. Communitie­s will have predictabl­e contributi­ons. Future hires will no longer contribute more than they can expect to get out in order to cover for the promises of long-gone politician­s.

Members will be in charge of their own futures.

Defined contributi­on plan opponents often accuse proponents of wanting to hand over members’ accounts to fee-hungry Wall Street firms. But there is no reason why PERA can’t be the default manager for members’ money. Continued success will be rewarded with continued member loyalty.

Converting new and unvested member to a defined contributi­on plan wouldn’t eliminate PERA’S unfunded promises. Those members will continue to accrue new benefits, and the existing unfunded liability will need to be amortized over the lifetimes of those members. Employers will still have to contribute on a per-employee basis to fund the legacy plan, and members under that plan will still likely see their contributi­ons rise.

But such a new plan will stop the problem from getting worse. States as geographic­ally and demographi­cally diverse as Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, and Utah have all adopted some version of this change. Colorado can be even bolder.

We didn’t get here overnight. PERA’S average return since 2000 has been 5.4 percent, even as its projected return has slowly dropped from 8.75 percent to today’s still-optimistic 7.25 percent. Legislator­s in the late 90s chose to increase benefits. In the early 2000s, the PERA board sold credit for service benefits at fire-sale prices. And the state legislatur­e, while paying every legallyman­dated dollar, failed to compensate for several years of poor returns.

In 2004, 2006, and 2010, PERA proposed and the legislatur­e cut benefits and increased contributi­ons. Each time, the PERA board hailed PERA’S return to long-term stability. Each time, they have been forced into additional fixes.

Rather than endless knob-turning and dialtwisti­ng that does little more than tighten screws, let’s retire this broken model and replace it with something that works both for Colorado’s taxpayers and its public servants.

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