[Excerpt] Beginning in fiscal year 2008, many state and local governments will begin reporting the costs of paying for nonpension retiree benefits on their financial statements in response to new accounting standards issued by the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB). These costs are referred to as other post-employment benefits (OPEB), with retiree health care representing the single largest component. The challenge facing state and local governments in meeting OPEB liabilities stems largely from the unplanned (and accelerating) increases in health care costs. Recent estimates suggest that state and local governments have OPEB liabilities of between $600 billion and $1.6 trillion, and virtually all of this is unfunded. The histor...
• The percentage of private-sector employers offering health benefits to retirees has been declining...
Assesses current and forecasted retiree healthcare spending by county, city, school district, and go...
GASB Statement No. 45 addresses how governmental units account for employees\u27 other post-employme...
[Excerpt] The total unfunded OPEB liability reported in state and the largest local governments’ CAF...
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...
State and local governments have promised nearly $1 trillion in retiree healthcare benefits to publi...
Most state and local governments provide employer-sponsored healthcare benefits to their retirees. I...
The governments of the fifty states of the United States have made promises to past and present empl...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "State a...
This paper discusses the trillions of dollars in government debt accumulated by state governments as...
Liabilities for pension and retiree health-care benefits provided by U.S. state and local government...
In the U.S., there are nearly 14 million state and local government workers and six million retirees...
The cost of medical benefits for state and local government retirees will soon shock taxpayers. In 2...
Retiree medical care expenditures in the United States are growing at a rapid rate, while and the re...
• The percentage of private-sector employers offering health benefits to retirees has been declining...
Assesses current and forecasted retiree healthcare spending by county, city, school district, and go...
GASB Statement No. 45 addresses how governmental units account for employees\u27 other post-employme...
[Excerpt] The total unfunded OPEB liability reported in state and the largest local governments’ CAF...
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...
State and local governments have promised nearly $1 trillion in retiree healthcare benefits to publi...
Most state and local governments provide employer-sponsored healthcare benefits to their retirees. I...
The governments of the fifty states of the United States have made promises to past and present empl...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "State a...
This paper discusses the trillions of dollars in government debt accumulated by state governments as...
Liabilities for pension and retiree health-care benefits provided by U.S. state and local government...
In the U.S., there are nearly 14 million state and local government workers and six million retirees...
The cost of medical benefits for state and local government retirees will soon shock taxpayers. In 2...
Retiree medical care expenditures in the United States are growing at a rapid rate, while and the re...
• The percentage of private-sector employers offering health benefits to retirees has been declining...
Assesses current and forecasted retiree healthcare spending by county, city, school district, and go...
GASB Statement No. 45 addresses how governmental units account for employees\u27 other post-employme...