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Entries in Pensions (8)

Sunday
Dec162012

Josiah Bartlett Center - The Libertas Award, Pensions and Maggie Hassan's Budget 






Our annual Libertas Dinner event was a big success this year. Universally, people found the three governors fascinating and entertaining. We got a terrific backroom look inside the inner sanctums of government. You can see above that Craig Benson was not just insightful but had Steve Merrill and John Sununu in stitches. The best part of the evening though was the opportunity to honor one of the state's great public servants, Ray Wieczorek who didn't just talk about limited government but lived it for twenty years. Follow this link to our description of Ray and his amazing career: Click here.

Pension System Funding Ratio falls to 56.1%

Unfunded Liability Climbs to 4.5 Billion

According to the Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR) of the New Hampshire Retirement System, the funding ratio for the state pension system fell by 1.3 percentage points to 56.1%... Click here to keep reading.

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How Maggie Hassan Will Make the Same Choices Bill O'Brien Did


Charlie's Weekly Column

Budgets always involve choices. This year’s choices are very different from the political rhetoric that has been thrown around for the last year. Far from restoring any previously made cuts, the new legislature and governor can’t afford the current budget and will have to find additional cuts not additional spending. Every policy wish competes against every other policy wish and there is money for none. Click here to keep reading.
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Three Takeaways from the November Jobs Report


Unemployment falls to 7.7%, but Work Force Participation Rate Falls too.
Last week, the November job report was released, which showed that unemployment had dropped to 7.7%, the second month in a row of .2 percentage point decline. Despite fears that super storm Sandy would impact the data, the Bureau reported that data from the affected areas were within the normal ranges... Click here to keep reading.
Friday
Sep072012

Josiah Bartlett Center - Pensions, Voter Turnout, and the Bond Bank

Weekly Update from the
Josiah Bartlett Center


Keeping you up to date on our latest research
on the issues impacting New Hampshire


The New Hampshire Retirement System’s 0.7% investment return for fiscal year 2012 was jumped on by some as a sign the system had failed because it had not met the assumed rate of return of 7.75%. As pointed out in an earlier piece, for FY12, the System’s returns were about par for the course in comparison to other state pension systems.

Taking a wider historical view, this is true both in comparison to the stock market as a whole and in comparison to other pension systems... Click here to keep reading


Primary Day

 
Gardner Predicts 168,000 voters

New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner is projecting 168,000 voters to cast ballots in next week’s Direct Primary elections. Gardner expects 102,000 Republicans and 66,000 Democrats to vote, in person or by absentee ballot to determine who will be on the November General Election ballot. Click here to keep reading.
JBC Report

Projecting Voter Turnout

Grant Bosse examines voter turnout in NH Primaries, and reports on Libertarian Gary Johnson winning ballot access in the Granite State in November. Click here to keep reading.

Municipal Bond Bank Downgrade Update


Continuing Coverage

The financial adviser to the New Hampshire Municipal Bond Bank doesn’t think last week’s downgrade will make it more expensive for cities and towns to borrow money. Click here to keep reading.

Saturday
Aug252012

Josiah Bartlett Center - Pensions, Restructuring State Government and Agenda 2012 Part II 

Weekly Update from the
Josiah Bartlett Center


Keeping you up to date on our latest research
on the issues impacting New Hampshire


"You’re an idiot. You’re so self-serving and adolescent that you can’t possibly have an adult conversation." That’s the barrage from political professionals. Politicians and their like should carefully avoid talking to us like we’re adults because clearly we aren’t. Anyone attempting to have an adult conversation or be clear about their positions on the issues of the day is supposedly a problem.

Voters, we are led to believe, prefer bland banalities. Rather than a plan or an idea, politicians should say “when I get there, I’m going to roll up my sleeves and get this thing going.” God forbid – or at least political hack forbid – they should let us know they’ve reached a conclusion about what needs to be done or not... Click here to keep reading

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Agenda 2012 Part 2

 
Miss this Week's Segments?

We've got you covered: click the links below to listen to the second part of the series.

Health Care:
Click to Listen

Education:
Click to Listen

Energy: Click to Listen

JBC Report

Debating the Pension System

Grant Bosse fills in for Jack Heath, and debates the future of the New Hampshire Retirement System with Joshua Elliott-Traficante, Policy Analyst with the Josiah Bartlett Center for Public Policy, and Dave Lang, President of the Professional Firefighters of New Hampshire. Click here to keep reading.

Restructuring State Government


A Stronger Governor?

Charlie Arlinghaus shares his ideas for giving the next Governor more control over the state bureaucracy with a House subcommittee studying how to restructure New Hampshire government.  Click here to watch.

Tuesday
Aug142012

Josiah Bartlett Center - Agenda 2012, Pension Investment Returns, and July Unemployment Data

WGIR AM 610 and 96.7 The Wave, New Hampshire’s News Radio, are partnering with the Josiah Bartlett Center, New Hampshire’s leading think tank, to produce AGENDA 2012, a two-week series investigating the top state issues facing New Hampshire voters this fall. Starting Tuesday, August 14th, AGENDA 2012 will air each weekday morning in the Paul Westcott Show... Click here to find out more!

Charlie's Weekly Column

Good proposals often founder on the rocks of partisanship. It is a sad truth of current political wars that Republicans are meant to reject Democratic proposals simply because of the party that made them and vice versa.... Click here keep reading

NHRS Right Around Average

So did the New Hampshire Retirement System do badly this past year? While the system did poorly in terms of meeting the assumed rate of return for the year, comparatively speaking, the NHRS was firmly in the middle of the pack. Click here to keep reading.

Three Takeaways from the July Unemployment Data


Uptick to 8.3%

Suffice it to say, it does not show much of an improvement over the June data. In fact, the unemployment rate increased from 8.2% to 8.3%. While it is only a tenth of a percent increase, it means that all of the marginal improvements made this year have now been completely wiped out. Looking deeper into the data, we see more troubling data:  Click here to keep reading.

Thursday
Jul192012

StateBudgetSolutions.org - New Report Shows Total Public Pension Debt Exceeds $4.6 Trillion

Alexandria, VA – Today, State Budget Solutions (SBS), a nonprofit organization advocating for fundamental reform of state finances, released a groundbreaking report on the true scope of the state and local public pension crisis. The SBS analysis found that the average public employee pension plan is only 41 percent funded while total unfunded liabilities as of 2011 are at least $4.6 trillion.
 
“State Budget Solutions’ pension study shows that our country is trillions of dollars in debt, and this is a hole that will overtake local and state governments if immediate action is not taken,” said Bob Williams, President of State Budget Solutions. “There is no option for status quo or incremental adjustments. Drastic reforms, innovations and political courage are needed to put our states and municipalities back on the path to fiscal survival.”
 
Recent reports have claimed that pensions were only underfunded by $885 billion as of 2010. That number was calculated with accounting guidelines of the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB). However, GASB ignores accounting standards used by economists requiring that assumed return on pension fund investments be based on the fact that pension benefits are guaranteed. Public pension funds calculate future debt based on politicians’ guesses about how much investments will earn and grow. Current GASB pension accounting standard follow that practice, and new standards set to go into effect by 2015 modify it.
 
Taxpayers must make up any difference between pension fund investment performance and promised benefits. However, governments do not have to include pension debt in their budgets.
 
State Budget Solutions' report uses fair market value and risk-free investment returns to determine that the actual unfunded liabilities are $4.6 trillion. That more accurately reflects the value of promised benefits taxpayers must fund whether investments perform or not.
 
“Failing to understand the scope of the pension crisis sets taxpayers up for a bigger catastrophe in the future. Without government action, states, counties, cities and towns all over America will go bankrupt. That means essential public services must be cut, dedicated government workers laid off, disrupting or eliminating public health, safety and education,” said Williams.  “It is vital to reform public pensions now. Real reform must be based on actual numbers instead of the optimistic outlook presented by using unrealistic assumptions.”
 
The calculations were done by Andrew G. Biggs, a former principal deputy commissioner of the Social Security Administration, associate director of the National Economic Council and director of research at the Congressional Institute. He has a doctorate from the London School of Economics and now is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.
 
To view the study click here.
 
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About State Budget Solutions
State Budget Solutions is non-partisan, positive, pro-reform, proactive and anchored in fundamental-systemic solutions. The goal is to successfully engage political journalists/bloggers, state officials and opinion leaders in a new way of thinking about state government and budgets, fundamental reforms, transparency and accountability. Sharing studies and articles, data sets, anecdotes and compelling narrative about what is happening in state and local budgets, The State Budget Solutions Project presents and disseminates information about every aspect of coming fiscal and economic disasters and, more importantly, highlights fundamental reforms to avoid them.

 
Check out StateBudgetSolutions.org for more information.