PENSION REFORM
JIM WATERS
2022-08-01
Inflation no reason to lose ground on pension progress
Editor’s note: The Bluegrass Beacon is a weekly syndicated newspaper column posted on the Bluegrass Institute’s website after appearing in publications statewide.
On the same day the American League beat the Senior Circuit in this year’s Major League Baseball All-Star Game again – it’s nine straight now – Jim Carroll, president of Kentucky Government Retirees, was again back in Frankfort with his hand out.
Carroll’s repetitive tune during his recent presentation to the Public Pension Oversight Board sounded much like the one he made last year, but this time he and others in his corner think rising inflation adds momentum to their push for increasing benefits.
Carroll and those in his corner hold that retirees need higher benefits or extra checks because stuff costs more.
He argues that a taxpayer-funded cost-of-living increase in benefits for retirees is “an investment in Kentucky’s economy now more than ever as we retirees are spending more in our local economies on goods and services.”
He should find a new argument; this one doesn’t work.
A thief, after all, can make the same argument by robbing a bank, spending the stolen money at the mall while claiming he boosted the community’s economy by expending those dollars locally.
Carroll’s ideological supporters see an opportunity to score political points by pushing a narrative that focuses on tying the painful effects of inflation to those who've been retired the longest.
Their storyline: These retirees, the most elderly among the 51,00 currently collecting from the Kentucky Employees Retirement System (KERS), need more because inflation has now made their salaries when they quit working for the state insufficient.
Frankfort Democratic Rep. Derrick Graham jumped on board that rhetorical train, pointing to public retirees now struggling after retiring in the 1990s with salaries and benefits “they thought they could live off of.”
Graham’s argument brings to mind one of the costliest culprits contributing to the enormous, ongoing unfunded liabilities in Kentucky’s retirement systems: failing to require beneficiaries to work, or wait, longer before collecting full pension benefits.
According to Kentucky Public Pension Authority data, the commonwealth has thousands of retirees who’ve been retired nearly as long as – some even longer – than they worked in and contributed to the system.
More than 10,500 state government and police retirees have collected pension benefits for 20 years or more, over 4,400 of whom haven’t clocked in for a quarter-century or longer.
Employees, whether in government or the private sector, can’t be blamed for accepting benefits offered by employers, which may be a reason for offering some type of one-time prefunded – prefunded – benefit to all or perhaps at least older retirees.
But even if such a benefit is granted, we need to understand that many of these retirees should have worked longer – much more so, in many cases – to adequately fund their retirement years, especially considering the significant increase in life expectancy since the commonwealth’s pension funds were created during the last century.
While the commonwealth has made progress in addressing its pension predicament, policymakers need to keep pushing for commonsense, fiscally responsible reforms, like raising retirement ages to help better mitigate future scenarios involving inflation or other uncertain developments.
Why can’t state policy reflect federal policy, which requires Social Security recipients to wait until at least age 66 – or 67, in some cases – to collect their full benefits?
New analysis from the Pew Charitable Trusts indicates that Kentucky is one of only six states where unfunded pension liabilities comprise more than 15% of personal income.
Also, the KERS remains one of the nation’s unhealthiest public retirement plans with barely 18% funding.
Policymakers must not allow the progress Kentucky’s made in funding, and reforming, its underwater pension plans to cause them to lose that hard-fought ground.
They especially must resist pressure to grant unaffordable permanent benefit increases and, instead, protect Kentucky taxpayers in the private sector, who are dealing with the higher cost of stuff, too.
Jim Waters is president and CEO of the Bluegrass Institute for Public Policy Solutions, Kentucky’s free market think tank. Reach him at jwaters@freedomkentucky.com and @bipps on Twitter.
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