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RESEARCH: Delaware
The Mercatus Center | by Eileen Norcross | March 21, 2013
To be fully funded, Delaware must increase its annual contribution to the pension system based on a market valuation of plan liabilities. This paper analyzes Delaware’s pension system on a fair-market or government- guaranteed basis, with reference to the average US Treasury rate on 10- and 20-year bonds in June 2012. A discussion of the discrepancy between current government accounting conventions and the fair-market value approach and the implications for plan management follows.
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RESEARCH
Wilshire Consulting | by Julia Bonafede | February 27, 2013
Wilshire Consulting estimates that the ratio of pension assets-to-liabilities, or funding ratio, for all 134 state pension plans was 73% in 2012, down from an estimated 77% in 2011. This deterioration in funding ratio was fueled by global stock market volatility in the twelve months ending June 30, 2012. Growth in fund assets could not keep up with growth in plan liabilities over fiscal 2012.
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RESEARCH
The National Bureau of Economic Research | by Kathryn Dominguez & Matthew Shapiro | February 4, 2013
Was the slow recovery of the U.S. economy from the trough of the Great Recession anticipated?
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RESEARCH
The National Bureau of Economic Research | by Ellen McGrattan & Edward Prescott | February 4, 2013
Alternative views on the problem the United States is facing: financing retirement consumption as its population ages.
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RESEARCH
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development | by André Laboul | September 27, 2012
Recent years have witnessed intense pension reform efforts in countries around the globe, often involving an increased use of funded pension programmes managed by the private sector. These funded arrangements are likely to play an increasingly important role in delivering retirement income in many countries and privately managed pension assets will play an increasing role in financial markets, notably as a source of long-term savings.
Published annually since 2005 by the The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Directorate for Financial and Enterprise Affairs, Pension Markets in Focus provides accurate, comprehensive, comparable and up-to-date statistics to help policy makers, regulators and market participants measure, compare and evaluate programme developments and country experiences globally.
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RESEARCH
by Robert Novy-Marx and Joshua Rauh | September 16, 2012
Calculation of the increases in contributions required to achieve full funding of state and local pension
systems in the U.S. over 30 years. Without policy changes, contributions must increase by a factor of 2.5, reaching 14.1% of the total own-revenue generated by state and local governments.
This represents a tax increase of $1,385 per household per year.
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RESEARCH: New York
Empire Center for New York State Policy | by E.J. McMahon | September 5, 2012
New York taxpayers spend billions of dollars a year on health insurance coverage for retired state and local government employees, many of whom are too young to be eligible for Medicare. But the mounting "pay-as-you-go" bill for retiree healthcare is just the tip of a much larger iceberg. Thanks to a new government accounting standard, the true cost of this long-term entitlement is finally emerging from the depths of state and local finances.
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RESEARCH
Boston Univ. School of Law, Public Law Research Paper | by Jack M. Beermann | August 27, 2012
Unfunded employee pension obligations will present a serious fiscal problem to state and local governments in the not too distant future. This article takes a looks at the causes and potential cures for the public pension mess, mainly through the lens of legal doctrines that limit public employers' ability to avoid obligations.
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RESEARCH
National Conference of State Legislatures | by Girard Miller | August 27, 2012
Girard Miller's presentation at the National Conference of State Legislators in Chicago August 2012.
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RESEARCH
Maryland Public Policy Institute and the Maryland Tax Education Foundation | by Jeff Hooke and Michael Tasselmyer | August 10, 2012
If public pension fund assets were indexed to relevant markets rather than actively managed, the public pension systems in Maryland and across the united States would save enormous amounts of money on fees, without undue harm to investment performance.
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