March 3rd, By Bryan Leonard State Budget Solutions.

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STATE BUDGET SOLUTIONS Just How Big are Public Pension Liabilities? March 3rd, 2011 By Bryan Leonard 2011 State Budget Solutions www.statebudgetsolutions.org

Corrected Version: This text has been edited to correct an error in a prior version. The total debt from the Pew study has been corrected to be $452,195,687,000 and the text has also been edited to reflect that amount. Just how big are public pension liabilities? March 3rd, 2011 By Bryan Leonard, State Budget Solutions The jig may finally be up for state pension funds. After years of fooling the public and the federal government, academics and the media are starting to take notice of the growing crisis. Indeed, the breadth and depth of the public pension debt in the states is being exposed in news sources ranging from The New York Times to Newsweek. But just how big is the problem? One of the most insidious aspects of pension liability is its stealth nature. Pension obligations don't appear on state balance sheets. As such, states with billions in unfunded pension liabilities may technically brag of "balanced" budgets while being swamped by pension debt. For example, Arkansas claimed a balanced budget last year, but had at least $2 billion in unfunded pension liabilities. Indeed, the unfunded pension promises in most states dwarf the total outstanding debt, tax revenues and spending. Complicating the issue even further is the difficulty in deciphering and understanding pension liability. As is often at the root of government transparency problems, states have devised special accounting rules that are inconsistent with the private sector and that hide the problem. As a result, the true size of pension liabilities is understated. Fortunately, several research organizations have made serious efforts to understand and quantify this burgeoning issue. Here s a look at a few. The Pew Center on the States recently released a report entitled "The Trillion Dollar Gap" that estimates the difference between the financial promises states have made and their actual assets. Pew calculates that states are saddled with almost half a trillion dollars in pension obligations; worse, Pew warns its estimate is low because most states won t assess their plans until June and the Pew calculation doesn t reflect dramatic investment declines in the second half of 2008. Others have undertaken the arduous task of trying to estimate how big public pension liabilities would be if states used the same market-valuation approaches as the private sector. One such attempt comes from Andrew Biggs of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI). Biggs points out that public pension funds are allowed to assume high rates of return without recognizing risk. Using the popular Black-Scholls technique for options-pricing, Biggs estimates what public pension promises would be worth if they were valued using private sector methods. Under his analysis, the taxpayers are on the hook for a staggering $2.8 trillion in unfunded pension liabilities. Still another approach is the one employed by Robert Novy-Marx of the University of Chicago and Joshua Rauh of Northwestern University, who point out that the future liabilities of state governments should be calculated in presentvalue terms. Using the discount rate on zero-coupon Treasury yields, they calculate the present value of state employee pension liabilities to be nearly $2.5 trillion. Years of inaction and obfuscation have contributed to this fiscal catastrophe, and the extent of the catastrophe is made alarmingly clear by the results of all three studies. Now, many states stand at the brink of bankruptcy, the federal government continues to aid them with stimulus packages and still the states are not addressing the real problems. Until the states are forced to truly balance their budgets, this problem will continue to run rampant. It s time for lawmakers to enact true reforms in pension accounting and funding.

Appendix A State Unfunded Pension Liabilities State PEW Study AEI Study Novy-Marx and Rauh (2009) Study AL $9,228,918,000 $43,544,880,000 $40,400,000,000 AK $3,522,661,000 $14,192,229,000 $9,300,000,000 AZ $7,871,120,000 $45,004,090,000 $48,700,000,000 AR $2,752,546,000 $20,026,314,000 $15,800,000,000 CA $59,492,498,000 $398,490,573,000 $370,100,000,000 CO $16,813,048,000 $71,387,842,000 $57,400,000,000 CT $15,858,500,000 $48,515,241,000 $4,900,000,000 DE $129,359,000 $5,688,663,000 $5,100,000,000 FL ($1,798,789,000) $98,505,110,000 $8,980,000,000 GA $6,384,903,000 $58,742,784,000 $57,000,000,000 HI $5,168,108,000 $18,533,398,000 $16,100,000,000 ID $772,200,000 $10,022,613,000 $7,900,000,000 IL $54,383,939,000 $192,458,660,000 $167,300,000,000 IN $9,825,830,000 $33,756,655,000 $30,200,000,000 IA $2,694,794,000 $21,266,226,000 $17,000,000,000 KS $8,279,168,000 $21,827,991,000 $20,100,000,000 KY $12,328,429,000 $47,016,382,000 $42,300,000,000 LA $11,658,734,000 $43,797,899,000 $36,400,000,000 ME $2,782,173,000 $13,227,289,000 $11,800,000,000 MD $10,926,099,000 $48,199,258,000 $43,500,000,000 MA $21,759,452,000 $60,476,274,000 $54,200,000,000 MI $11,514,600,000 $72,187,197,000 $63,600,000,000 MN $10,771,507,000 $59,354,330,000 $55,100,000,000 MS $7,971,277,000 $32,225,716,000 $28,700,000,000

MO $9,025,293,000 $56,760,147,000 $42,100,000,000 MT $1,549,503,000 $8,633,301,000 $7,100,000,000 NE $754,748,000 $7,438,589,000 $6,100,000,000 NV $7,281,752,000 $33,529,346,000 $17,500,000,000 NH $2,522,175,000 $10,233,796,000 $8,200,000,000 NJ $34,434,055,000 $144,869,687,000 $124,000,000,000 NM $4,519,887,000 $27,875,180,000 $23,900,000,000 NY ($10,428,000,000) $182,350,104,000 $132,900,000,000 NC $504,760,000 $48,898,412,000 $37,800,000,000 ND $546,500,000 $4,099,053,000 $3,600,000,000 OH $19,502,065,000 $187,793,480,000 $166,700,000,000 OK $13,172,407,000 $33,647,372,000 $30,100,000,000 OR $10,739,000,000 $42,203,565,000 $37,800,000,000 PA $13,724,480,000 $114,144,897,000 $100,200,000,000 RI $4,353,892,000 $15,005,840,000 $13,900,000,000 SC $12,052,684,000 $36,268,910,000 $43,200,000,000 SD $182,870,000 $5,982,103,000 $4,700,000,000 TN $1,602,802,000 $30,546,099,000 $23,200,000,000 TX $13,781,228,000 $180,720,642,000 $142,300,000,000 UT $3,611,399,000 $18,626,024,000 $16,500,000,000 VT $461,551,000 $3,602,752,000 $3,300,000,000 VA $10,723,000,000 $53,783,973,000 $48,300,000,000 WA ($179,100,000) $51,807,902,000 $42,900,000,000 WV $4,968,709,000 $14,378,914,000 $11,100,000,000 WI $252,600,000 $62,691,675,000 $56,200,000,000 WY $1,444,353,000 $6,628,204,000 $5,400,000,000 Total US $452,195,687,000 $2,860,967,583,000 $2,485,800,000,000

Appendix B Five Worst State Pension Liabilities (per study) California California California Illinois Illinois Illinois New Jersey Ohio Ohio Massachusetts New York Texas Ohio Texas New York Appendix C Five Best State Pension Liabilities (per study) New York Vermont Vermont Florida North Dakota North Dakota Washington Delaware South Dakota Delaware South Dakota Connecticut South Dakota Wyoming Delaware Appendix D Aggregate US Unfunded Liabilities (per study) $452,195,687,000 $2,860,967,583,000 $2,485,800,000,000 State Pensions and Retiree Healthcare Benefits: The Trillion Dollar Gap," PEW Center on the States, accessed January 4, 2011, http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/report_detail.aspx?id=56695 Biggs, Andrew, "The Market Value of Public-Sector Pension Deficits," AEI Outlook Series, no. 1 (2010), http://www.aei.org/outlook/100948 Novy-Marx, Robert and Joshua Rauh, 2010, "Public Pension Promises: How Big Are They and What Are They Worth," Journal of Finance (forthcoming), http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1352608 Note: These figures were computed by taking the difference between ABO Liabilities, Treasury Rate and Pension Assets in Table IV.