Liabilities for pension and retiree health-care benefits provided by U.S. state and local governments are causing concerns for taxpayers and for those holding government bonds. Many question whether the methodology used to calculate these liabilities is appropriate, since the private sector calculates retirement system liabilities using different methods and assumptions. This chapter reviews and critiques current actuarial and accounting standards under which governmental retiree liabilities are calculated and compares and contrasts these standards to those used by private-sector employers
Assesses current and forecasted retiree healthcare spending by county, city, school district, and go...
Defined benefit plans remain the predominant form of retirement benefit for employees of state and l...
State-run retirement plans for non-covered private sector employees are a rapidly growing area of st...
Liabilities for pension and retiree health-care benefits provided by U.S. state and local government...
State and local U.S. pension plans hold an estimated $3 trillion in assets, with market values regul...
[Excerpt] The total unfunded OPEB liability reported in state and the largest local governments’ CAF...
[Excerpt] Beginning in fiscal year 2008, many state and local governments will begin reporting the c...
The funding policy for defined benefit pension plans covering government employees represents an imp...
This report, a first-of-its-kind effort, provides data on state Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB...
States paid $18.4 billion in 2013 for worker retirement benefits other than pensions, which are know...
We discuss pension system risk in the United States by focusing on the investment policy and the met...
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 2006, an issue of serious concern to state legislatures was the long-term security of the defined...
State and local government pension underfunding has become a major focus of public policy debate due...
Assesses current and forecasted retiree healthcare spending by county, city, school district, and go...
Defined benefit plans remain the predominant form of retirement benefit for employees of state and l...
State-run retirement plans for non-covered private sector employees are a rapidly growing area of st...
Liabilities for pension and retiree health-care benefits provided by U.S. state and local government...
State and local U.S. pension plans hold an estimated $3 trillion in assets, with market values regul...
[Excerpt] The total unfunded OPEB liability reported in state and the largest local governments’ CAF...
[Excerpt] Beginning in fiscal year 2008, many state and local governments will begin reporting the c...
The funding policy for defined benefit pension plans covering government employees represents an imp...
This report, a first-of-its-kind effort, provides data on state Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB...
States paid $18.4 billion in 2013 for worker retirement benefits other than pensions, which are know...
We discuss pension system risk in the United States by focusing on the investment policy and the met...
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 2006, an issue of serious concern to state legislatures was the long-term security of the defined...
State and local government pension underfunding has become a major focus of public policy debate due...
Assesses current and forecasted retiree healthcare spending by county, city, school district, and go...
Defined benefit plans remain the predominant form of retirement benefit for employees of state and l...
State-run retirement plans for non-covered private sector employees are a rapidly growing area of st...