Author Topic: States have $530 Billion Dollars in unfunded liabilities for public pensions.  (Read 352 times)

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U.S. local government pension costs exceeds $530 billion: govern
Reuters ^ | 12/23/09 | Tom Ryan


Posted on Friday, December 25, 2009 12:57:19 PM by FromLori

U.S. state and local governments face more than $530 billion in unfunded public pension liabilities and most do not have funds set aside to pay for them, a government report showed on Wednesday.

U.S.

As of June, state governments were on the hook for around $405 billion and 39 of the country's largest local governments must come up with around $130 billion for their other post employment benefits, the U.S. Government Accountability Office said.

The report said unfunded state liabilities ranged from as low as $71 million in Arizona to $62 billion in California.

Local government liabilities ranged from $15 million for a county in Arizona to over $59 billion for New York City, the GAO said.

The economic meltdown hit all U.S. municipalities hard and many have had difficulty keeping up with their pension, or OPEB, obligations.

"State and local governments faced increasing fiscal pressures in 2008, in part because of recession-induced revenue shortfalls," the report said. But "unfunded OPEB liabilities on their own are large enough to represent a fiscal pressure for state and local governments," the GAO said.

It said that by 2050, the projected operating budget imbalance for state and local governments is 4.7 percent of gross domestic product. This is largely due to increases in health-related spending.

The congressional watchdog said that only around 35 percent of the 89 governments it reviewed reported having set aside at least some assets to cover their liabilities.

This means that "most state and local governments included in our review are paying for their OPEB liabilities for active and retired workers in a given year from their current revenues."

The most common actions that municipalities took to address the shortfall were changes to their contributions to the benefits, such as reductions to the amount of health insurance premiums paid


(Excerpt) Read more at reuters.com ...

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Do you guys have any idea how large this is in relation to people who actually pay taxes? 

And some of you morons like Blacken, Mons, and Benny want more spending? 

WTF is wrong with some of you?