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Government Pensions

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Title: Government Pensions Up There Lessons from United States Author: david Last modified by: thaisis.barboza Created Date: 9/25/2003 12:36:15 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Government Pensions


1
Government Pensions Up ThereLessons from
United States
INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR PENSION SCHEMES FOR CIVIL
SERVANTS AND PENSION FUNDS Itamaraty Palace,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Esplanada dos
Ministérios, Brasília, Brazil, 01-02 October 2003
  • David LindemanConsultant to OECD

Some materials are taken from USDOL studies and
from Mitchell and Hustead, Pensions in the Public
Sector (2001)
2
United States --some pension basics
3
Overall pension structure in US
  • About 96 percent of the workforce is covered by
    the national pension regime (old-age, survivors
    and disability insurance, OASDI)
  • modest benefit level, actuarial adjustments after
    age 62, increasing normal retirement age,
  • in OECD context, relatively good demographics
  • Major exception to mandatory coverage is
    government workers but
  • 60 plus percent of Federal workers now under
    OASDI
  • 75 percent of state and local government workers
    under OASDI
  • At any time, about half of the private sector
    workforce participates in a tax qualified plan
  • Participation does not necessarily mean actively
    making contributions in a 401-k style plan
  • Lifetime participation rates are much higher,
    probably on the order of 80 percent.

4
United States private vs. public pension coverage
  • Coverage for public sector workers are higher.
    According to USDOL studies, among wage and salary
    workers, as a percentage of the relevant labor
    force --

All wage and salary Private sector Public sector
Employer sponsors plan 58 91
Workers participate 43 77
Full-time wage and salary Private sector Public sector
Employer sponsors plan 63 94
Workers participate 50 85
5
United States some pension basics 3
  • Pensions are significant players in capital
    markets
  • About 4.5 to 5.5 trillion USD in 2000 in private
    sector pension assets at the high point of the
    market.
  • Another 2.3 trillion USD in state/local
    retirement plans.
  • (Note GDP of about 10 trillion USD in 2000).
  • But roughly 90 percent of all pension plans (less
    than 100 members) account for roughly 10 percent
    of participants, assets.

6
Trends in Policy and Practice
  • Development of CoDA or 401-k style plan
  • Mostly depends on workers making contributions
    that employers then match.
  • Workers almost always make their own portfolio
    decisions within a bounded range.
  • (In public sector, 3 kinds of CODAs under
    sections 401-k, 403-b, 457 plans)
  • Major shift from defined benefit (DB) schemes,
    which reflects
  • underlying shifts in economy (e.g., decline in
    manufacturing)
  • Academic, policy elite criticisms of portability
    losses tax benefits.
  • interactions of regulation and macroeconomic
    environment
  • Trend away from DB in public sector is less
    pronounced
  • But in both sectors, even more so in the public
    sector, employers who sponsor a traditional
    (usually DB) pension also provide a CoDA.
  • DB plans still hold 50 percent of the assets.

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12
United States --Federal Civil Service Pension
Reform
13
Background
  • Federal civil servants had separate pension
    scheme dating from early 1900s, a product of
    earlier civil service reform.
  • Some state and local government pension schemes
    that survived Depression.
  • By 1960s, comparability in total compensation
    vis-à-vis the private sector was the principle.
  • 1935/1939 Old-Age, Survivors and Disability
    Insurance
  • In general, Federal government not covered. But
    in early 1950s, military were covered
    prospectively
  • Many state/local governments, but not all,
    voluntarily subscribed. About 75 percent of
    state and local workforce are covered.

14
Problems with less-than-full coverage
  • Gaps in disability and survivors coverage for
    mobile workers. Early-leaver losses
  • Can lead to undesirable lock-in effects.
  • Inadequate old-age benefits for some windfall
    benefits for others.
  • OASDI is re-distributional.
  • Unfair to exempt some relatively high paid (civil
    servants) from that policy.
  • Especially elected political officials
  • Until late 1970s, these were issues among
    experts. Public and political elites mostly
    unconcerned and uninterested.
  • 1977/1983 Amendments changed landscape

15
1977/1983 Amendments
  • 1977 law rationalized OASDI dynamics and cut some
    short-term benefits for overall budget reasons.
  • Also enacted two offsets to prevent unintended
    windfall benefits
  • 1977 law also created Study Group on Universal
    Coverage. Study Group produced report in 1980.
  • More famous 1983 law addressed loose ends from
    1977 law, and mandated coverage of new Federal
    workers
  • Congress gave itself two years to design new
    pension regime for Federal workers
  • Made easier by existence of study group report
    with concrete design options and, as a byproduct,
    some capacity in one of the congressional support
    agencies to staff the reform.

16
Changing Pension Landscape
  • 1977 Study Group used the principle of
    comparability and examined practices of large,
    good employers in service sector. Three tier
    approach
  • Base OASDI coverage
  • Usually some final pay defined benefit plan no
    more than 0.5 percent and 1.0 percent per year.
  • A defined contribution thrift plan.
  • About the same time, IRS regulations implementing
    IRC 401(k) and DOL regulations implementing
    ERISA 404(c) were making thrift plans more
    tax-efficient and feasible to operate.
  • 401-k made allowed thrift plans to become fully
    EET
  • 404-c allows employers to minimize fiduciary
    burden by letting worker make investment choices
    among at least three options.
  • By early 1980s, 401-k plans were becoming very
    popular.

17
Mid-80s Federal Civil Service Reform
  • Generally followed the logic of the Study Group
    Report.
  • Same overall replacement rate for long tenure
    workers but with workers (a) participating as
    other citizens in OASDI benefits and costs, and
    (b) paying higher explicit worker contributions.
  • Allowed vested workers to stay in the old Civil
    Service Retirement System (CSRS) or switch to
    Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS). New
    entrants and not-vested workers under FERS.
  • Very few switched. One exception due to special
    efforts.
  • FERS has three components (1) OASDI coverage, (2)
    moderate sized occupational DB tier, and (3)
    401-k style Federal Thrift Savings Plan (TSP).
  • Most workers focus on TSP. Only if they become
    long tenure workers do they ever think about the
    DB piece.
  • TSP also extended to CSRS workers but on less
    generous terms. Recently extended to military.

18
Acquired Rights
  • Acquired rights was not a large issue in Federal
    civil service reform debate.
  • Old CSRS formula, while generous, was not
    excessive relative to pension packages among
    comparable employers
  • For switchers, it is easy to calculate hybrid
    formula of CSRS and FERS rights.
  • 1977 social security law had already taken away
    windfalls.
  • Under Federal US law, legal protection of
    acquired rights rarely extends to system rights
    vs. past accruals and then only on the basis of
    current wage or salary.
  • But state workers may have greater protection --
    see later discussion.

19
Why Did the Reform Happen?
  • Financing problems in OASDI in 1977/1983 made an
    experts issue a fiscal and political issue.
  • Covering relatively high paid Federal workers
    makes OASDIs 75 year balance look better.
  • Of course taxpayers and/or workers pay for this
    improvement but that is hidden in the civil
    service account in the overall budget.
  • Congressmen became vulnerable to charges of
    unjust enrichment.
  • Precedent of military coverage
  • Advantages of non-coverage (windfalls) had been
    removed in 1977 OASDI amendments. Otherwise CSRS
    workers were left alone.
  • 401-k type pensions had become extremely
    fashionable.

20
Thrift Savings Plan
  • Choice among (1) equity index C fund, (2)
    corporate bond F fund, and (3) Federal government
    bond G fund. Recently a (4) small cap index fund
    and (5) international index fund have added.
    Discussions to add a lifecycle option.
  • Decisions to change ones portfolio have time
    lags that most private 401-k plans do not have.
  • For post-reform workers, automatic 1 percent, 1-1
    match for next 3 percent, and 0.5-1 match for
    next 2 percent.
  • For CSRS, allowed to put in 5 percent without
    matching.

21
Thrift Savings Plan
  • While the funds are technically outside the
    government (CBO and GAO ruling), the G fund is
    used by US Treasury to meet the Debt Limit when
    the ceiling becomes constraining.
  • On the other hand, the G fund has blended and
    less volatile rates of return that are hard to
    replicate in the private sector. Ideal
    risk-less investment medium maybe better than
    I-bonds and TIPS options for private sector
    households.
  • ERISA fiduciary rules apply to TSP governance.

22
United States state and local plans
23
Unresolved Issue of State and Local Government
Workers in OASDI
  • Uncovered state/local workers about one-quarter
    of that workforce.
  • Disproportionately police and fire workers plans.
  • Windfall limits remain a constant (and
    complicated) irritant to those affected by them.
    Except for an effect on OASDIs long-term
    balance, Congress might repeal them.
  • Three barriers
  • Current privatization debate about OASDI makes
    it hard to rationally discuss further state/local
    coverage.
  • Recent trend in opinions from the Supreme Court.
  • Fiscal

24
Constitutional cloud
  • Supreme Court has gone through three phases on
    constitutional issue
  • Until the late 1930s, Court had a comity
    doctrine that made it to any Federal impositions
    on state and local governments, even in their
    capacities as employers.
  • Increasingly accommodating 1940 to mid-1980s.
  • In last 10-15 years increasingly negative again
    (impair sovereign powers test)
  • But did uphold Medicare coverage and law
    prohibiting withdrawal from OASDI.

25
Fiscal Federalism Realities
  • Congress probably (but not 100 percent) could
    find constitutionally permissible way to cover
    state/locals, but any such attempt would
  • impose severe burdens on states/locals with PAYG
    schemes (e.g., Massachusetts) and force good
    states to subsidize bad states.
  • not be popular even among those who have funded
    schemes (e.g., California)
  • If ever tackled, probably on a new entrant basis
    and without any fiscal relief to affected
    entities.

26
State/local pension landscape
  • Some 261 systems and 378 plans
  • Systems apply to more than narrow employment
    group
  • Benefit provisions in schemes not integrated with
    OASDI are more generous, but combined
    OASDI-supplementary scheme benefits are generally
    higher in total.
  • As of 1996, median financing ratio of state/local
    plans was estimated at 91 percent (average 87).
  • But serious under-funding (book reserve or PAYG
    financing) in some jurisdictions, and
  • In some jurisdictions, liabilities are evolving
    at an ever higher rate.

27
Beneficiary rights state/local government plans
  • State and local plans are not covered by the
    labor law provisions of ERISA, but they are
    covered (via workers) by tax law provisions.
  • But ironically court decisions under common law
    and using the contract clause of the US
    constitution often provide rights that are equal
    or superior to those under ERISA
  • In addition, some states have their own
    constitutional provisions outlining pension
    rights for state and local government workers.
    But state constitutions are more like
    super-laws than hard-to-amend national
    constitutions.

28
Governance state/local government plans
  • In general, governance of public sector pension
    schemes is similar to private sector.
  • Selection of trustees not without problems in
    terms of competence, political patronage and ties
    to fund management.
  • Auditing and oversight could be improved in some
    jurisdictions.
  • DC plans that rely on transparent contracting-out
    to private service providers and letting workers
    make their own portfolio choices have fewer
    obvious problems, but
  • controversy over management of TSPs new IT
    system
  • Public sector (and non-profit) schemes are under
    much greater pressure to exercise corporate
    governance than are large private sector schemes
  • Private sector pension plan trustees are not
    inclined to tell other private firms how to
    manage their businesses.
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