
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Trenton NJ, Warning that the coronavirus stock market plunge has put a majority of the nation’s public government pension plans “at risk,” Senate President Steve Sweeney today urged the President and Congress to partner with state and local governments to solve pension and infrastructure funding challenges with a federally-financed program in next month’s coronavirus recovery package.
The proposed Pension Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (PIFIA) would provide $500 billion in federally-financed low-interest loans to state and local governments to stabilize retiree plans and to provide capital for investments in needed new infrastructure as well as other asset classes. The coronavirus stock market meltdown now threatens the stability of a majority of the nation’s public pension plans covering state, county, municipal and school employees and retirees. Stronger pension plans will stabilize markets and bolster the economy, creating new good-paying jobs.
The 30-year PIFIA loans, which would carry a 1.5 percent interest rate, would be issued only to state and local governments with investment-grade credit ratings. The projected cost to the federal budget would be $5 billion, and the Federal Treasury could finance the program by increasing bond sales and capitalizing on the global “flight to quality” that has increased investor demand for U.S. Treasury securities as an investment safe haven.
“We believe the PIFIA program will have broad support in both red states and blue states because it addresses the persistent underfunding of both pensions and infrastructure,” Senator Sweeney said. “Virtually every state has pension systems that could benefit from participation in the PIFIA loan program.
“While New Jersey, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Illinois and other states have implemented important reforms to improve the stability of their pension funds, the coronavirus stock market plunge has pushed a majority of state and local government pension plans below the 65 percent funding threshold that would be considered ‘at risk’ under the ERISA Act for private pension plans,” he noted.
The Pew Charitable Trusts’ Public Sector Retirement Systems project, which has been assessing the impact of the coronavirus stock market plunge on pension portfolios, projects that without positive investment performance over the next three months, the funding gap facing state pension systems could jump from $1.24 trillion in 2018 to $1.7 trillion by the end of the fiscal year. As of 2018, there were $4.3 trillion in assets in the 299 state-administered and 5,977 locally administered pension systems covering 25 million active and retired public employees.
“The pension crisis will get worse if state and local governments grappling with revenue shortfalls and a lingering economic slowdown caused by the coronavirus are unable to make required pension payments,” Sweeney said. “We are committed to keeping up our pension payment schedules in New Jersey, but others may not be able to do so. This plan is a cost-effective way to provide state and local governments not only with short-term relief, but with a long-term solution to a pension crisis that has been building for two decades.”
Senator Sweeney praised Governors Larry Hogan of Maryland and Andrew Cuomo of New York, the bipartisan chair and co-chair of the National Governors Association for their leadership in calling for a $500 billion state aid package, and U.S. Senators Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) for proposing a $500 billion legislative plan.
“The PIFIA pension loan program could easily be incorporated into their efforts as a particularly cost-effective way to provide aid to state and local governments. Including a $5 billion allocation for PIFIA loans in the aid package would generate well over $100 billion in budget savings over the next first three years of the program,” Senator Sweeney said. “Just as important, it will sharply reduce the growing unfunded liability of state and local pension systems across the nation.”
Senator Sweeney thanked Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, with whom he discussed the PIFIA concept two weekends ago, for putting the issue of pension relief on the table
“This is not about Illinois or New Jersey. It is about the country. It is a loan program that will be paid back in full with interest. Loan proceeds would have to be put irrevocably and directly into pension funds to reduce the unfunded liability, and borrowers would be required to maintain Actuarially Required Contributions into their pension funds. The nation needs a program like this now,” Senator Sweeney said.
America’s pension systems were 102 percent funded in the year 2000, dropped to 89 percent funded after the dot.com bubble burst, and fell to 73 percent funded after the stock market plunge of the Great Recession. Pew’s pension experts project that public pensions could be below 65 percent funding in the wake of the coronavirus market plunge.”
While state pension underfunding gets the most attention, there is a real funding crisis in the locally administered pension systems, from the large pension systems serving first responders in Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston and El Paso to the hundreds of smaller pension systems in Florida, Pennsylvania, Illinois and other states with decentralized pension funds.
The PIFIA program is modeled after the federal government’s successful Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (TIFIA) and Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA), and it is closely aligned with these programs in including an infrastructure investment component.
Under the proposed PIFIA legislation governments taking PIFIA loans would be required to invest 20% of the loan proceeds in revenue-generating infrastructure projects to diversify their pension portfolios and begin to address the nation’s $2 trillion backlog in transportation, water and other infrastructure needs. The pension fund investments could include asset transfers, toll roads, bridge or tunnel projects, or infrastructure funds that underwrite such investments.
DO NOT let accountability and responsibility for NJ’s pension funding shortfall be buried in the COVID-19 pandemic economic rescue effort. The shortfall did not suddenly arrive in New Jersey in 2020!
The People of New Jersey need to wake up, remember the names and fecklessness of those in power, both past and present, who are actually responsible for allowing this financial disaster to worsen under their watch. These irresponsible individuals need to be called to account by whatever means possible. They should at least be prevented in future from ever holding any position of power within New Jersey, and if possible immediately removed from such positions if currently held.
While you “shelter in place”, review these postings, which took a mere 30 seconds to find:
https://www.nj.com/politics/2019/09/njs-public-worker-pension-system-is-the-worst-funded-in-the-nation-again.html
https://nypost.com/2018/01/13/looks-like-times-up-for-new-jerseys-pension-fund/
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-02-25/three-new-governors-face-three-old-pension-disasters
– see
They vilified Chris Christie for trying to fix the mess.
Dig out those YouTube videos and watch.
How about cutting payments and fixing the ridiculous payouts to the New Jersey pension system. A nice six-figure pension should not be allowed
Yes the jig is up.
Parties over for all the union slobs who have been milking the taxpayers of NJ for years…and you think the feds are going to bail you out?
You think your going to raise my property taxes to make up the difference? Think again…
The Taxpayers bailed out the Pigs in the Financial Industry after they collapsed the economy in 2008. Now it’s time for them to repay the taxpayers. Piggy Stock Brokers, Bankers and Retirement Fund managers have been lining their pockets with huge paychecks since the Stock Market increased in value from the market low of 6,547.05 in March 23,209 to a high of 29,551 on February 14, 2020. Time for those greedy pigs to repay the taxpayers NOW. The worst offenders are PIGGY Retirement Fund Managers who steal money form their clients without the client even knowing it. New Jersey should tax their income at 70% to repay the N.J. taxpayers for bailing them out.
Blaming New Jersey government employees for the years & years of financial mismanagement by the State Legislature and the Current and Past governors is like blaming the janitor who worked at Enron for the financial collapse of Enron, Only a moron would believe that……
To the person mentioning Enron, You are wasting your breath, the moron who keeps complaining about government employees pay, benefits and pensions most likely doesn’t know anything about Enron and it’s epic collapse.
“the Stock Market increased in value from the market low of 6,547.05 in March 23,2009 to a high of 29,551 on February 14, 2020.”
…and the pension system is still broke.
…and yes part of the blame should be on the government employees that scream at the mention of pension reform.
The Pension system is broke because Governors used it as their piggy bank to balance their bloated budgets and to add insult to injury every Governor since Christine Todd Whitman failed to properly fund the pension funds. That’s why the State pension systems are underfunded. Those are the facts.
Yes that’s right !