This paper discusses why public pensions have warranted so much interest of late, focusing on their financing status and reform options. Many state pension plans are underfunded, and while they can pay promised benefits for some years, there is also enormous cross-state heterogeneity and several state pension plans will require substantial new revenue and/or benefit cuts to bring them to long-term solvency. What remains to be seen is how the burden of returning the plans to financial health will be borne, and how key stakeholders will implement reforms in these systems if they are to return to viability before time runs out
State public pension plans, mostly defined benefit plans, cover pension benefits for 12.8 million ac...
Defined Benefit (DB) state pension trust funds are an integral component of state finances and play ...
Despite playing a central role in many public and private employees\u27 retirements, defined benefit...
This paper discusses why public pensions have warranted so much interest of late, focusing on their ...
Chapter 1 applies a public choice approach to the problem of unfunded pension liabilities and adopts...
This paper uses the theory of ‘capital as power’ to analyze the struggle over public pensions in the...
The public pension crisis has come under increasing scrutiny over the past decade as shifting demogr...
In the U.S., there are nearly 14 million state and local government workers and six million retirees...
Unfunded employee pension obligations will present a serious fiscal problem to state and local gover...
In my first essay, we examine the financial impact of states’ legislative response regarding pension...
State and local government pension underfunding has become a major focus of public policy debate due...
Many pension schemes mandated by governments have accumulated large reserves. The management of thes...
Municipal governments in the U.S. began offering retirement plans for their workers in the mid-19th ...
Pension plans covering US public sector employees now face the twin challenges of poor asset returns...
Public pension funds that cover retirement benefits for almost 20 million active or retired employee...
State public pension plans, mostly defined benefit plans, cover pension benefits for 12.8 million ac...
Defined Benefit (DB) state pension trust funds are an integral component of state finances and play ...
Despite playing a central role in many public and private employees\u27 retirements, defined benefit...
This paper discusses why public pensions have warranted so much interest of late, focusing on their ...
Chapter 1 applies a public choice approach to the problem of unfunded pension liabilities and adopts...
This paper uses the theory of ‘capital as power’ to analyze the struggle over public pensions in the...
The public pension crisis has come under increasing scrutiny over the past decade as shifting demogr...
In the U.S., there are nearly 14 million state and local government workers and six million retirees...
Unfunded employee pension obligations will present a serious fiscal problem to state and local gover...
In my first essay, we examine the financial impact of states’ legislative response regarding pension...
State and local government pension underfunding has become a major focus of public policy debate due...
Many pension schemes mandated by governments have accumulated large reserves. The management of thes...
Municipal governments in the U.S. began offering retirement plans for their workers in the mid-19th ...
Pension plans covering US public sector employees now face the twin challenges of poor asset returns...
Public pension funds that cover retirement benefits for almost 20 million active or retired employee...
State public pension plans, mostly defined benefit plans, cover pension benefits for 12.8 million ac...
Defined Benefit (DB) state pension trust funds are an integral component of state finances and play ...
Despite playing a central role in many public and private employees\u27 retirements, defined benefit...