Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Posted: 27 Dec 2015 02:16 PM PST Illinois Pension Problems Mount Illinois' unfunded liabilities have risen ten out of the last eleven years. The only exception was 2011. This was despite massive rallies in financial markets every year since 2009. One out of every five tax dollars goes to pensions, but that's nowhere close to enough to stem the tide. Illinois has the worst funded pension plans in the nation. Those plans are a mere 42% funded in aggregate. That bleak estimate understates the problem because it assumes 8% annualized returns going forward. Those returns are not going to happen. I expect 0-2% returns at best, and most likely negative real returns for seven to ten years. Still No Budget In October, Moody's cut Illinois debt to one step above junk, specifically citing pensions as the "greatest challenge". Lower ratings have driven up borrowing costs. In turn, rising borrowing costs mean less money to spend elsewhere. The new year is less than a week away, but Illinois still does not have a budget. Bloomberg reports Illinois Record Budget Impasse Makes It Worse for the State's Pension Disaster. As 2015 draws to a close, Illinois marks half a year without a budget. No spending plan has driven up borrowing costs, sunk its credit rating, and perhaps worst of all, exacerbated the state's biggest problem: its underfunded pensions.Death Watch Illinois Illinois is terminal. Pension cancer is too deep and has spread too far to save the patient. The state is bankrupt morally, politically, and monetarily. However, there is no provision for state bankruptcy (something US Congress needs to address). Regardless, what cannot be paid won't. Illinois cancer is not just at the state level. The cancer permeates cities far and wide. The Chicago Board of Education is already dead whether the coroner or Mayor Rahm Emmanuel makes the announcement or not. Tax hikes won't help the dead or dying. Instead they will cause the healthy and able to flee. Many Illinois cities lay in a bankruptcy coffin, but the current law will not let the coroner make that announcement. The best way to ease municipality pain is to pass a law allowing municipal bankruptcies. Such a bill would let terminal cities and taxing bodies move to hospice to die in peace. That's something the Illinois legislature can and should address. Illinois Republicans, I have a question: Where the heck is that bill? Fresh Start Corrupt politicians in bed with union officials have hollowed out the state beyond repair. Let's not pretend otherwise. Illinois needs a fresh start:
Until we see those changes, the state will lay on the death-bed slowly bleeding workers and businesses in a fate worse than death by bankruptcy or default. Sobering Pension Assessment As noted above Illinois pension plans are 42% funded, and that's with projected returns of 8%. If returns average 2% or even 5%, liabilities and under-fundings will soar. Unfortunately, history suggests 0% is more likely. Here's further discussion of what to expect and why.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
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