The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Report distorts pension debt. discourse in Conn.

- By Red Jahncke Greenwich resident Red Jahncke is president of The Townsend Group Intl, a business consultanc­y in Connecticu­t, and a freelance columnist published in national and Connecticu­t newspapers.

In 2015, the Malloy administra­tion commission­ed a study of Connecticu­t’s State Employees Retirement System (SERS) by the Center for Retirement Research, a prominent pension research institute. While the center’s report was well done and most of its recommenda­tions were adopted by the state, the center miscalcula­ted the level of employee pension benefits, saying they were not “overly generous.” They were and, today, still are overgenero­us.

The center’s error has distorted subsequent debate about state employee compensati­on, the origins of the drastic underfundi­ng of SERS, the high cost to the state of pension benefits, and the inevitable escalation of the state’s annual contributi­on to SERS.

The center stated that “The main cost driver for SERS is the unfunded liability from legacy costs and funding shortfalls, not overly generous benefits to members (employees and retirees).”

The statement is correct, except that many state employee union supporters and apologists have misinterpr­eted it to say “The only cost driver for SERS is the unfunded liability from legacy costs and funding shortfalls ...” That is not correct.

Misinterpr­etation is understand­able in light of another statement by the center “the cost of benefits provided to current employees (the total normal cost) is actually below (the national) average for similar plans.”

This second statement was erroneous. It relied upon analysis which glossed over the key question of who bears “the cost.” The cost of benefits is borne both by the state and by employees who contribute to their own pensions.

Because Connecticu­t employees contribute­d so little to their own pensions, the cost to the State of Connecticu­t was actually higher than the average cost of pension benefits in the 50 states.

Here are the numbers from the center’s study (page 17). In 2014, the State of Connecticu­t contribute­d 8 percent to SERS, while the 50-state average state contributi­on was 7 percent.

These percentage­s are pension cost as a percent of payroll cost.

The higher level in Connecticu­t was necessary because state employees contribute­d only 2.2 percent to their own pensions, while the 50-state average employee contributi­on was triple that amount, or 6.6 percent.

The differenti­al between Connecticu­t’s 8 percent and the national average of 7 percent amounted to a 14.3 percent higher level in Connecticu­t.

Either way you look at the extra 14.3 percent — as a higher state cost or as a larger employee benefit — it was both overly generous and above the national average.

So how did the center get it wrong? It ignored employee contributi­ons. It looked only at the gross unallocate­d cost of pension benefits, namely 10.2 percent in Connecticu­t versus an average of 13.6 percent in the 50 states. This creates an illusion opposite to reality.

The fair and accurate measure is net cost for the state and net benefit for employees, which, in Connecticu­t, was 8 percent. The gross cost of the benefit of 10.2 percent was offset by the employee contributi­ons of 2.2 percent, leaving both the state’s net cost and the employee’s net benefit at 8 percent. Nationally, a gross cost of 13.6 percent was offset by employee contributi­ons of 6.6 percent, leaving a lower net cost/benefit of 7 percent.

The center stated at the outset of its study that SERS was only 42 percent funded in 2014, “among the lowest in the nation.” A state with a severely underfunde­d pension fund should not be bearing a higherthan-average cost to provide its employees more generous pension benefits than states with better-funded pensions.

Yet Connecticu­t has been doing exactly that, with the consequenc­e that SERS remains among the lowest funded pension funds in the nation, and with the further consequenc­e that the pension cost for the state increases every year, both absolutely and as a percent of the state’s overall budget.

And pension benefits are not the only element of “generosity” in Connecticu­t. State employees enjoy better wages and more robust health care benefits than state employees in the other states. It should be noted that Connecticu­t’s higher wages further skewed the results of the center’s pension benefits analysis. With pension benefits measured as a percent of wages (“payroll”), Connecticu­t’s higher wages made its pension benefits appear to be lower, or less generous.

Because Connecticu­t employees contribute­d so little to their own pensions, the cost to the State of Connecticu­t was actually higher than the average cost of pension benefits in the 50 states.

However, the larger issue is total compensati­on. There have been five studies of total state employee compensati­on in Connecticu­t. The first was a Connecticu­t state commission’s study in 2010. Yankee Institute commission­ed studies of Connecticu­t in 2015 and again in 2020. Finally, the American Enterprise Institute carried out two studies comparing all 50 states, the first in 2014 and the second in 2019 (covering both state and municipal employees).

All five studies compared state employee compensati­on to private sector compensati­on. In all five, Connecticu­t state employees earned from about 30 percent to more than 40 percent more than the state’s private sector employees, the highest gap in the nation. That is both unfair and unsustaina­ble.

 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? Former Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel P. Malloy speaks at the Capitol in Hartford in 2012.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press Former Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel P. Malloy speaks at the Capitol in Hartford in 2012.
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