USA TODAY US Edition

Pension cuts coming for government­s

- Dan Caplinger

In the past, workers generally chose between two paths. Working in the private sector often meant getting a better salary but less-attractive fringe benefits. By contrast, public-sector employees typically got lower base pay, but the promise of valuable benefits such as traditiona­l pensions made the sacrifice worth it for many workers.

That has changed. Financial pressure on state and local government­s has forced them to cut benefits for publicsect­or workers. In particular, according to Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research, newly hired employees saw dramatic cuts in their public-pension-plan benefits in several areas from the mid-2000s to the mid-2010s.

Rising retirement and benefit-vesting ages, longer periods for measuring salaries for pension calculatio­n purposes, lower percentage­s of pay and smaller adjustment­s for cost of living increases all are making public-sector pension benefits smaller. Thus far, cuts have been much rarer among current employees of state and local government­s, with employers choosing to make only prospectiv­e changes for new hires.

It’s not clear whether reduced publicpens­ion benefits by themselves will permanentl­y hurt the ability of government­s to find highly qualified employees. The fact current employees have largely escaped cuts has been a positive for retention. Neverthele­ss, with pension cuts often coming at the same time as wage and hiring freezes and less-extensive health insurance coverage, the days of counting on a government job to provide superb benefits seem to be over.

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