In several states, public pension plans are at risk of insolvency within a decade. These risks are significant, and the solutions currently contemplated are likely to fall short of what is necessary to contain the problem. If public pension plans do become insolvent, it seems likely the federal government will bail them out. This Article proposes that the federal government prepare for the prospect of federal financial support of public pension plans by instituting an optional regulatory regime for public pensions. If a state elects not to participate, its public pension plans would be ineligible for federal financial support. In states that do elect to participate, public plans would be eligible for federal financial support in the event o...
There is a “retirement crisis” in America. Contributing to this crisis is the fact that millions of ...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "Recent ...
In this essay, I examine the problem of designing a pension plan within the context of our larger pu...
Unfunded employee pension obligations will present a serious fiscal problem to state and local gover...
To protect the financial future of retirees, this Note advocates that Congress pass legislation mand...
Evidence of state and local government dysfunction surfaces in many areas. One is the operation of e...
Roughly 40 million American active and retired workers are covered by local, state or federal pensio...
[Excerpt] In 1974 Congress passed the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). This complex ...
[A] new tax expenditure concept, which is described for the first time in this article, achieves its...
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "This testimon...
The regulation of private and public pension plans in the United States begins with the premise that...
This article provides a wide-angle view of the looming crisis in retirement security. The impending ...
ABSTRACT Defined benefit pensions are still an important part of retirement income security for 44 m...
Despite playing a central role in many public and private employees\u27 retirements, defined benefit...
The current pension funding gap for public employees through state-sponsored defined benefit (DB) pl...
There is a “retirement crisis” in America. Contributing to this crisis is the fact that millions of ...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "Recent ...
In this essay, I examine the problem of designing a pension plan within the context of our larger pu...
Unfunded employee pension obligations will present a serious fiscal problem to state and local gover...
To protect the financial future of retirees, this Note advocates that Congress pass legislation mand...
Evidence of state and local government dysfunction surfaces in many areas. One is the operation of e...
Roughly 40 million American active and retired workers are covered by local, state or federal pensio...
[Excerpt] In 1974 Congress passed the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). This complex ...
[A] new tax expenditure concept, which is described for the first time in this article, achieves its...
Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "This testimon...
The regulation of private and public pension plans in the United States begins with the premise that...
This article provides a wide-angle view of the looming crisis in retirement security. The impending ...
ABSTRACT Defined benefit pensions are still an important part of retirement income security for 44 m...
Despite playing a central role in many public and private employees\u27 retirements, defined benefit...
The current pension funding gap for public employees through state-sponsored defined benefit (DB) pl...
There is a “retirement crisis” in America. Contributing to this crisis is the fact that millions of ...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "Recent ...
In this essay, I examine the problem of designing a pension plan within the context of our larger pu...