The Palm Beach Post

Downturn would be dire for some state pension funds, Pew study says

- By Geoff Mulvihill

CHERRY HILL, N.J. — Many pension funds for public workers already owe far more in retirement benefits than they have in the bank, and the problem will only grow worse if the economy slows down, according to a Pew Charitable Trusts report released this week.

The study found that the New Jersey and Kentucky funds are in such perilous shape that they risk running dry.

“Even after eight years of economic recovery — eight straight years of stock market gains — the public pension plans are more vulnerable than they’ve ever been to the next recession,” researcher Greg Mennis said.

The Pew study, published by the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government at Harvard University, examines what would happen to pension funds in 10 states under various economic scenarios.

If a fund doesn’t bring in enough money to cover its promised retirement costs, the state would have to make up the difference. In New Jersey, that would mean spending at least $2 billion more a year.

“These findings don’t come as a surprise and underscore the need to bolster the state’s surplus,” said Jennifer Sciortino, a spokeswoma­n for the state Treasury Department. She said Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat who took office in January, wants to increase the surplus by 50 percent.

New Jersey is gradually raising its contributi­ons, but the Pew report says getting to full funding will be a challenge for the state.

Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin, a Republican, signed a bill last month reducing some retirement benefits for current and future teachers, but not for those already retired.

On Thursday, Bevin spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Kuhn said the Pew findings echo warnings from the governor since he took office. She said addressing the pension fund’s $60 billion unfunded liability is his top fiscal priority.

The report said that even with changes, Kentucky could be in a situation similar to Connecticu­t and Pennsylvan­ia. Both states have increased state pension contributi­ons and might have to keep them high for decades to come, squeezing out funding for other priorities in the state budget.

The report also found that the relatively healthy pension systems in North Carolina and Wisconsin are more likely to weather downturns. Pew also looked at the funds in Colorado, Ohio, South Carolina and Virginia.

Notably absent from the report was California, which has the two largest public pension funds in the nation. They had a combined $168 billion in unfunded liabilitie­s in 2016, according to another recent Pew report. Mennis said California’s funds were not included in the stress test study because they are so large and uniquely structured.

Neverthele­ss, the issue has been on the mind of California Gov. Jerry Brown, a Democrat who is in his final year in office. Brown suggested earlier this year that when a recession hits, pensions “will be on the chopping block.”

 ?? BILL PUGLIANO / GETTY IMAGES ?? Thousands of Kentucky public schoolteac­hers protest against a pension reform bill in April at the state capitol building in Frankfort, Ky. A law signed last month reduces some teacher pension benefits.
BILL PUGLIANO / GETTY IMAGES Thousands of Kentucky public schoolteac­hers protest against a pension reform bill in April at the state capitol building in Frankfort, Ky. A law signed last month reduces some teacher pension benefits.

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