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To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (270617)8/23/2010 6:12:52 PM
From: Broken_ClockRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
"B'sides, someone's gotta pay for all the public employees pensions, and it sure ain't gonna be Clowngress (or the Clownifornia State Treasury).....'

Message 26773122

Truth is Numbers
By Steve Christ
Friday, August 20th, 2010

wealthdaily.com

Here’s a train that just keeps on chugging down the tracks. When it gets here it will run us over…

From Bloomberg by Dunstan McNichol entitled: Pension Cuts Won't Cover a $3 Trillion Bill in U.S., Study Says

“Taxpayers must cover at least a third of a $3 trillion bill for public employee pensions even if lawmakers eliminate cost-of-living increases and raise the retirement age, according to an academic study.

“Even if states uniformly eliminated generous early retirement deals and raised the retirement age to 74, the unfunded liability for promises already made would still be more than $1 trillion,” Joshua D. Rauh, associate professor of finance at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management in Evanston, Illinois, said in a statement.

He presented the paper yesterday to the National Bureau of Economic Research’s State and Local Pensions conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

The study of 116 U.S. retirement plans for teachers and government workers showed that as of June 30, 2009, they had $1.89 trillion in assets to cover $3.15 trillion in liabilities, Rauh said. The research used the typical fund’s assumption that investments will earn about 8 percent annually. That is a gap of $1.26 trillion — more than double the shortfall of a year earlier, according to a study by the Pew Center on the States.

Using more conservative investment assumptions, such as the rate of return on U.S. Treasury zero-coupon bonds on June 30, 2009, the liabilities are $5.28 trillion, Rauh calculated.

“Assuming states don’t start defaulting on their bonds and other debts, it seems that taxpayers will be footing most of the multitrillion dollar bill for the pension promises that states have already made to workers,” he said.”

Isn’t government just wonderful?

I guess the rest of us can work until we drop dead so “civil servants” can retire early.

I’ll say it again, the status quo cannot possibly be maintained.



To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (270617)8/23/2010 7:28:59 PM
From: James HuttonRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
Hey, as Thurmond and Byrd showed, you can be ineffective in Congress well into your 90s.