A Municipal Atomic Bomb
April 28, 2009
by Webmaster
A Municipal Atomic Bomb
By 2015,
the City of Los Angeles will need $2 billion every year to fund its public
employee pension plan, four times as much as the current $530 million budget
deficit. To put that number in
perspective, $2 billion equals the combined budgets of the city fire
department, police department and sanitation bureau. The message to city residents and taxpayers is
clear – Los Angeles will likely go bankrupt within five years unless
significant structural changes are made to the pension system.
All pension funds suffered horrible market losses over the past two years, but the
economic downturn simply accelerated an inevitable crisis. Six years ago, pension fund contributions as
a percentage of total city revenue were less than 4 percent. It is 8 percent this year, and the percentage
is projected to exceed 20 percent by 2015. That means 20 cents of every taxpayer dollar will fund retiree
pensions instead of actual city services.
The structural problems that are contributing to this
crisis are many:
- Pension funds
assume an 8 percent annual return, and the lifetime benefit to employees is
based on that return.
- When the stock market doesn't earn an 8
percent return or loses money, the city is expected to make up the
difference.
- Employee contributions do not increase when market
conditions change; only the city's contribution changes.
- Early
retirement ages and an increase in life expectancy means longer payments, some
exceeding the number of years the employee worked for the city.
- The city plan includes an annual cost-of-living increase in addition to a guaranteed retirement benefit.
It's obvious that fixing the city's pension system will
require fundamental structural changes. Essential
to making these changes will be vigilant and vocal taxpayers, elected officials
with vision and courage, and union leaders who understand that while the
current situation may be a win for their members, it is a disaster waiting to
happen for the 4 million residents and taxpayers of Los Angeles.
Last week, the Chamber's Board of Directors recommended to
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa that he not add to this pension crisis during his
negotiations with union leaders on this year's budget. We also suggested
that he immediately appoint a task force of business, labor and professional
city staff to address this crisis and present a series of
recommendations. We have no option but to fix the
pension system today. This crisis is a municipal
atomic bomb waiting to explode.
And that's The Business Perspective.

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