Pensions are a primary source of retirement savings throughout the nation. Poor management decisions, recessions, and cronyism have depleted these funds to a point where they now become a significant risk, not only to those who rely on them, but to the local economy as well. Chicago recently became aware of the devastation of their policies when faced with a pension budget shortfall of $6 billion that neither they or the State of Illinois can afford. Difficult choices will need to be made that will likely upend entire networks of people and companies that need and profited off these pensions.
The problem with pensions is that when they go South there are few win-win situations, and reform comes with a significant cost; especially to those of older age. The cost either falls on the states, on employees, or on the national economy. As the risk of multiple pension implosion rises at a time when national debt is high, the Great Recession is coming to a close, and international strife is present it becomes necessary to tackle this problem succinctly.
It is difficult to truly wrap one's arms around this problem unless a thorough investigation is conducted to understand not only the underlining mechanics that led to the decisions which created the cash shortfall. Only through understanding, official integrity, and strategic implementation can new approaches to retirement planning be implemented for the benefit of its most important beneficiaries.
Honest conversations are difficult because they run into the very fabric of how we view our economic and political system. There is a high level of potential fallout from questionable decision-making that is likely to be embarrassing and minimized by internal social networks. Companies could potentially close their doors and thousands of people may march on the street in complaint of the swooshing away of their concerns.
Accountability can be difficult when an entire region has a stake in how the system operates. Whether one is a judge or a janitor the money from these funds fuels the economic and political engines of the area making it challenging to find buy-in for reform; the problem turns into a crisis before action is taken. Political parties are so heavily invested in the outcome and their interpretation of events that few can rise above the rhetoric to make decisions in the best interest of all stakeholders.
Busted pension systems does allow academics an opportunity to research how and why these pension funds go bankrupt to ensure that sound management principles are developed for future decision-making. With the support of the Justice Department, and those who support the greater good, poor decisions can be analyzed, and new "red flags" created. Academics can use this information to develop stronger models and test those models to help teach students how to handle responsibilities throughout their careers.
A thorough investigation requires the analysis of tens of thousands of documents, interviews, and comparing successful pensions with the pensions in question. Chasing specific rabbit holes to understand individual transactions is beneficial but so is taking a meta-data approach that allows research the ability to see where all these rabbit holes were dug can reveal important information. It is a mammoth undertaking but when you consider the billions of dollars lost, and the growing concern of pension problems in other areas, it is a small drop in the bucket.
Putting the power back in pension funds means freeing them from the many interested parties that seek personal gain and ensuring a proper team of diversified and qualified professionals are in place to create checks-and-balances on official's decisions. That diversified team should be made of people that represent different political, ethnic/racial, and industry backgrounds. Their ability to see the problem from multiple vantage points makes all the difference in the success of new strategic choices.
Pension reform is a painful process of changing minds about responsibility and how to handle that responsibility. It doesn't matter if a person is a recipient of pension monies, works for the pension system, is a political candidate, a business that receives investments, or a taxpayer that has to bail out the system because all have a vested interested in protecting our futures. Reform is in the best interest of everyone!
Pension change relies on leadership that takes the high road even when no one else is listening and there is little support for change. It is about making decisions that others are afraid to make and working toward something more idea. A leader's greatest asset is to stand back from the rhetoric, assess the situation, and create a group of collaborators that are connected by the same end goals. Putting power into pensions is about solving problems before they become unmanageable and finding new ways paths for the future.
The blog discusses current affairs and development of national economic and social health through unique idea generation. Consider the blog a type of thought experiment where ideas are generated to be pondered but should never be considered definitive as a final conclusion. It is just a pathway to understanding and one may equally reject as accept ideas as theoretical dribble. New perspectives, new opportunities, for a new generation. “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.”—Thomas Jefferson
Showing posts with label retirement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retirement. Show all posts
Friday, May 29, 2015
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Gallop Poll Shows Positive Worker Outlook
A poll by
Gallop brings discusses improvement in worker perception of employment. 58% of
full and part-time workers say they are completely satisfied with their jobs as
compared to 50% in 2009-2013. The growth in the economy, lower unemployment
rates, and improving employment opportunities are having an impact on worker
perception.
The numbers
also spotlight a few areas of concern. The amount of work, physical conditions,
relationship with bosses, job security, recognition and workload are above 50%.
Areas below 50% are opportunities for promotion, retirement, health insurance,
earning power, and job stress.
Benefits
such as health insurance and retirement have taken a significant hit in the
current market. Employers often cut back on these expensive benefits due to the
inherent increasing costs with little direct return to the employer. Employees
will be asked to pick up a higher percentage of these costs.
A problem
results when earning power is not sufficiently rising, making increased
contributions to such programs difficult. As the cost of medical care shifts to
employees with lower incomes new ways of doing things become necessary. The
health care system itself is expensive beyond the cost of insurance.
Another
important issue to workers is retirement. The traditional pension is nearly
gone and the 401K is the standard approach. In today’s transient world the 401K
offers more portability but also requires higher employee contributions. This
can be difficult for people at lower income brackets.
As a country
we still have some work to do and the positive employment perceptions follow
suit with the improving economy. New ideas on how to manage retirement, higher
savings rates, a more efficient medical care system, and a focus on improving
income opportunities for all Americans is necessary. The numbers can slide as
quickly as they rose.
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