Solving the Public Pension Plan Funding Crisis

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The current menu of solutions to fix public pension plans and reduce funding deficits has been partially adopted by plan sponsors and legislative bodies across the nation. But today’s approaches still leave plan sponsors without a long-term solution to chronic underfunding.

Today’s proposals include raising contribution rates on the part of employees, extending retirement ages, capping retirement payments and establishing defined contribution plans for new employees. All are touted with great fanfare as solutions. Yet these proposals will not provide any significant reduction in funding deficits because of the continued assumption of investment and longevity risk by public plan sponsors. I propose a combination of liability-driven investing and a risk-transfer mechanism to gradually eliminate plan liabilities.

Why current proposals will fail

There are two primary reasons why current proposals are ineffective: they ignore escalating retiree liability and its associated risks, and asset allocation is mismatched to liabilities.

Public defined-benefit plans mature with, on average, more than 50% of actual liability attributable to current retirees. In the 100 largest public pension plans, retiree liabilities account for $1.98 trillion of $3.6 trillion total liabilities.1 Increasing employee contributions, extending retirement ages and establishing defined contribution plans will have no effect on existing retiree liabilities. Secondly, public pension plans are burdened with statutory return assumptions ranging from 7.5% to 8.5%. The higher return assumptions skew asset allocation towards higher volatility or illiquid investments including private equity, hedge funds and other alternative asset classes. As a result, during periods of equity market declines, investments have to be liquidated at losses to fund the current and fixed liabilities of the plan.

Pension plan liability risk has been transferred and reduced for decades through various strategies, including terminal funding, liability-driven investing and risk transfer to other entities, such as life insurers, through institutional annuities. It is politically unlikely and structurally unreasonable to assume that public plan sponsors can reduce risk by closing or terminally funding their plans to current employees.

The implementation of liability-matching investment strategies, however, and risk transfer through a systematic and disciplined process would allow plans to increase funding rates, secure funding for current liabilities without incurring investment losses and increase sustainability. Let’s look at how these two approaches would work in the context of a defined-benefit plan.


1. 2012 Public Pension Funding Study, Milliman