Union Pension Liabilities Soar to $369 Billion

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**Another bailout on the way?
**

Union Pension Liabilities Soar to $369 Billion

Last year, in an article for THE WEEKLY STANDARD I discussed the growing number of existential threats to unions. One of the major challenges facing unions is that their multi-employer pension plans are deep in the hole, and the problems were being masked by accounting standards that allowed them to hide their debt:
Getting a handle on multi-employer pension liabilities has always been notoriously difficult, and concern about their viability has grown as American union membership has dwindled in the face of globalization and technologically driven gains in productivity. A recent Government Accountability Office report found that as of 1998 the number of union members paying into the plans was equal to the number of retirees receiving benefits. The Financial Accounting Standards Board recently noted in a press release that a “study of over 100 multi-employer plans, including the largest plans in the country (as measured by assets), indicated that in 2008 those plans were collectively underfunded by over $160 billion (approximately 44 percent of their collective plan liabilities).” …

and

In 2010, congressional Democrats actually floated a bill that would have required taxpayers to essentially bail out union pension plans in perpetuity. Now that the expected liabilities have more than doubled, it’s even more absurd to imagine such a bailout would gain political traction. Still, Democrats remain heavily dependent on unions for campaign cash – they’re expected to spend a whopping $400 million on elections this year. It’s probably a good idea not to underestimate what President Obama and congressional Democrats to will do to reward their largest donor.

more…
 
Another bailout on the way?

Union Pension Liabilities Soar to $369 Billion


Last year, in an article for THE WEEKLY STANDARD I discussed the growing number of existential threats to unions. One of the major challenges facing unions is that their multi-employer pension plans are deep in the hole, and the problems were being masked by accounting standards that allowed them to hide their debt:
Getting a handle on multi-employer pension liabilities has always been notoriously difficult, and concern about their viability has grown as American union membership has dwindled in the face of globalization and technologically driven gains in productivity. A recent Government Accountability Office report found that as of 1998 the number of union members paying into the plans was equal to the number of retirees receiving benefits. The Financial Accounting Standards Board recently noted in a press release that a “study of over 100 multi-employer plans, including the largest plans in the country (as measured by assets), indicated that in 2008 those plans were collectively underfunded by over $160 billion (approximately 44 percent of their collective plan liabilities).” …

and

In 2010, congressional Democrats actually floated a bill that would have required taxpayers to essentially bail out union pension plans in perpetuity. Now that the expected liabilities have more than doubled, it’s even more absurd to imagine such a bailout would gain political traction. Still, Democrats remain heavily dependent on unions for campaign cash – they’re expected to spend a whopping $400 million on elections this year. It’s probably a good idea not to underestimate what President Obama and congressional Democrats to will do to reward their largest donor.

more…
How ironic! The money the unions are spending on elections this year is enough to plug the pension deficit. But it appears they would rather spend the money on politicians who will make US pay the deficit.
 
How ironic! The money the unions are spending on elections this year is enough to plug the pension deficit. But it appears they would rather spend the money on politicians who will make US pay the deficit.
369 billion vs 400 million 😉 They probably view it as an investment. Pay up $400 million and the Democrats will make sure they get the $369 billion even if it helps make the country go belly up.
 
I like unions and members should get their pensions, but if they will spend money like that it’s their own fault.
 
How ironic! The money the unions are spending on elections this year is enough to plug the pension deficit. But it appears they would rather spend the money on politicians who will make US pay the deficit.
Hmmmm. Guess I need to get new glasses. China just doesn’t make WalMart fall-apart glasses like they used to anymore. 🤷
 
Bernanke has admitted keeping interest rates low is detrimental to savers and pension plans which require a certain amount of safe returns on their reserves to be solvent.
 
Old adage: NEVER promise more than you can deliver. Prudence matters.

Many pension plans get into trouble because they promise more than they can deliver. They set the contribution rates too low and expect the investment returns to be more robust than reality.

They are stuck with the promise and not enough money to pay the retirement when it comes due. The recent investment losses - the past 10-12 years - have been so harmful that the expected annual return of 7 to 8% is woefully insufficent to make up for those losses. In 2008 the market was about 14,000. With an expected annual 8% return, the market in 2012 should be about 20,500. But, it is at about 12,900 today. Thus, we are at about 62% of where we expected to be. An annual 8% return will not fill the hole we are in.

Most pension plans know the year they will run out of money, IF the current contribution rates are NOT increased.

Only two solutions: 1) increase the contributions or 2) decrease the promised retirement benefit. It is very hard, legally, to decrease the promised benefit. And no one wants to have to pay more for their future retirement. So the pension plans know the year they will go broke.

The so called 3rd solution - a government bailout of pension plans - will not happen. There are simply too many plans that will need that bailout and we cannot borrow enough. The USA is already $16 TRILLION in debt. And that debt is growing. Too few people want to cut government spending.

Another old adage: There ain’t no free lunch.
 
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