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Friday, October 08, 2010

Annapolis, We Have A $35 Billion Problem

A massive shortfall in Maryland's state employee pension system threatens to drown taxpayers in retiree debt, according to a Sept. 29 study by the Maryland Tax Education Foundation. As of June 30, the shortfall had reached $15 billion -- more than twice the state's entire general obligation debt. Drastic changes must be made now to avert a financial catastrophe.

Although the Maryland State Pension Fund's asset allocation is similar to other states, it has significantly underperformed them by about $2 billion over the last 10 years, Jeffrey Hooke, author of "Security Analysis on Wall Street" and MTEF's volunteer chairman, told The Examiner. But what really worries Hooke is assumption by the fund's managers that it will earn 7.75 percent over the next 30 years. If those rosy assumptions are not realized, and the fund only manages to earn a more realistic 6 percent, the pension shortfall will balloon to $20 billion -- in addition to $15 billion in unfunded health benefits for state employees.

The pension fund has $32 billion in total assets, so a $15 billion shortfall puts it well within the danger zone. Taxpayers would have to contribute up to $2 billion more per year to make up the difference, Hooke says. That's problematic, because Maryland taxpayers already resent being forced to downscale their own retirement plans to cover the cost of their public servants' extravagant benefits.
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1 comment:

  1. Thieves. No one but a theft or thieves could have caused this problem. This state is full of corruption.

    ReplyDelete

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