oh, nothing to see here....
http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3373
Quote:
A spate of recent articles regarding the fiscal situation of states and localities have created the misguided impression that drastic and immediate measures are needed to avoid an imminent fiscal meltdown, according to a major new report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. These articles mistakenly lump together states’ and localities’ current, largely recession-related fiscal problems with longer-term issues relating to bond indebtedness, pension obligations, and retiree health costs.
Most states are projecting large operating deficits for fiscal year 2012, as revenues remain well below pre-recession levels even as the economic downturn has increased the need for public services. States are required by law to close these deficits before the start of the fiscal year, just as they have done in each of the past three years. In contrast, states have several decades to address the above longer-term issues, whose size recent articles have tended to exaggerate.
“Overheated claims about state and local budget problems not only are inaccurate, but also could lead policymakers to take unwise steps such as allowing states to declare bankruptcy or forcing them to change the way they report their pension liabilities as a condition for issuing tax exempt bonds,” said Iris J. Lav, senior advisor to the Center and the report’s lead author.
....
Claims that states and localities have $3 trillion in unfunded pension liabilities that may drive them into bankruptcy are similarly exaggerated, according to the report.
The oft-cited $3 trillion figure is based on valuing future liabilities as if investments in pension trust funds will earn no more than “riskless” investments such as Treasury bonds. In reality, however, state pension trust funds are invested a diverse mix of stocks, bonds, and other instruments and have earned a much higher return in recent decades than riskless investments. If one follows accepted state and local accounting rules and calculates pension liabilities using the historical return on plans’ assets, the unfunded liability stands at a more manageable $700 billion. This, and not the amount derived from the riskless rate, is closer to the amount of funds states and localities are likely to actually have to contribute to make their pension funds whole.
In most states, a modest increase in funding and/or changes to pension eligibility and benefits should be sufficient to remedy underfunding, the report explains. The small number of states that have skipped contributions or increased benefits without corresponding funding likely will have to make larger changes. But states and localities have the next 30 years in which to remedy any pension shortfalls; they generally should avoid increasing pension contributions as long as the economy remains weak and they are struggling to provide basic services.
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Oh really? How did that work out for Prichard and how is that going to work out for Detroit? You can't count on that tax base existing 30 years from now.
So who are these people, exactly?
http://www.cbpp.org/about/index.cfm?fa=board
Quote:
Board of Directors
David de Ferranti, Board Chair
President, Results for Development Institute
Henry J. Aaron, Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
Kenneth Apfel, Professor of the Practice, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland
Jano Cabrera, Managing Director, Burson-Marsteller
Henry A. Coleman, Rutgers University, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy
Marian Wright Edelman, President, Children's Defense Fund
James O. Gibson, Senior Fellow, Center for the Study of Social Policy
Beatrix Hamburg, Visiting Scholar, Cornell Medical College, Department of Psychiatry
Antonia Hernández, President, California Community Foundation
Frank Mankiewicz, Vice Chairman, Hill and Knowlton
Lynn McNair, Vice President for Development, Salzburg Global Seminar
Richard P. Nathan, Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Public Policy and Director, Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government
Marion Pines, Senior Fellow, Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies
Robert D. Reischauer, President, Urban Institute
Paul Rudd, Adaptive Analytics, LLC
Susan Sechler, German Marshall Fund
William Julius Wilson, Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor and Director of the Joblessness and Urban Poverty Research Program, Harvard University
Emeritus Board Members
Barbara Blum, Senior Fellow, National Center for Children in Poverty, Columbia University
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I'm sure they're a nice, nonpartisan group.
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