Title: Government Pensions
1Government 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)
2United States --some pension basics
3Overall 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.
4United 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
5United 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.
6Trends 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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12United States --Federal Civil Service Pension
Reform
13Background
- 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.
14Problems 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
151977/1983 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.
16Changing 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.
17Mid-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.
18Acquired 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.
19Why 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.
20Thrift 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.
21Thrift 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.
22United States state and local plans
23Unresolved 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
24Constitutional 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.
25Fiscal 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.
26State/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.
27Beneficiary 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.
28Governance 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.