Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Are all Recipients of Public Pensions Crooks and Parasites?
by Tom Kando
It’s open season on (public) pensioners. The moronic consensus is that municipalities and states are going belly up because they over-committed to paying out fat pensions to their employees. Detroit is ground zero. The bankruptcy judge there has decided that the city does NOT have to honor its contracts with its retired employees. These folks will have to line up along with everyone else owed money by Detroit, i.e. probably get practically nothing. These are people whose average pension income, were it honored, would be $18,000 per year! Woopty doo!
Attacking public pensioners used to be what the rich did, the private sector capitalists, the Republican Right. But in our lemming-like society, when a message is repeated often enough, sooner or later it becomes a bandwagon. Today, those who spout off the refrain that “unless public entitlements/pensions are reined in, we are headed for Armageddon,” (or something like that) include not only “centrist Republicans” (this is an oxymoron, come to think of it), such as the Sacramento Bee’s Dan Walters, but also people who are still viewed as reasonably liberal: For example that paper’s Dan Morain. This message is repeated over and over again by all of the media, not just Fox News. Is it any wonder that the opinions expressed in the locker room at my health club unanimously ape this narrative?
We hear that California cities that have gone bankrupt, such as Vallejo, Stockton and San Bernardino, have no choice but to follow in the footsteps of Detroit and forsake their retired employees. California’s two massive public retirement systems PERS and STERS are said to be in deep doo-doo, unless the State (= the tax payer) bails them out, because they committed to overly generous future pensions in the past. San Jose’s government is seen as enlightened because it is about to balance its budget by reneging on some of its pension obligations.
This piling on public employees and their retirement is particularly immoral because it is voiced so often by (1) the wealthy and (2) people who are themselves double, triple and even quadruple beneficiaries of public retirement benefits!
For one thing, having pensioners (in Detroit and other bankrupt entities) line up alongside investors in the hope that they’ll get back some (10%?) of what is owed to them is absurd: When you invest in bonds or anything else, you knowingly take the risk. You know that you may come out ahead, or not. On the other hand, a pension is a legal contract, an agreement to exchange a defined contribution for a defined benefit.
And by the way, all these arguments are generic: everything that is said in the attacks on public pensions, and in their defense, can also be said about Social Security.
Take me as an example: For several decades, money was taken out of my monthly paychecks for Social Security and for my PERS retirement. This added up to hundreds upon hundreds of withholdings which, by the end of my career, amounted to thousands of dollars every month. My after-tax take-home income was close to half of my gross. The benefits which I collect today are, to a very large extent, MY OWN MONEY.
I know, I know, public pension systems also MATCH their employees’ contributions (often 1:1), so the money which retirees get back after retirement is not all theirs...that is, if they live long enough. Of course, some people croak fairly soon after they retire, so they are the patsies.
And then there are the invidious distinctions many people make between different categories of public retirees. Recently someone argued with me that veterans are more entitled to public pensions than teachers are. Others feel that peace officers and fire fighters are also more meritorious than other public employees.
So the emerging consensus is that most public employees are parasites, especially after they retire. Not infrequently in recent years, the people whom I have heard clamor most vociferously against public benefits, most sanctimoniously about “individual responsibility,” are triple-dipping retirees who get, in addition to their private investments, social security AND a state, federal or municipal pension! These people live on six-figure pensions, but they begrudge the average $1500 monthly pension promised to Detroit employees, or the average $2,000 promised to members of PERS. What double-talking hypocrisy, what obscenity! leave comment here
© Tom Kando 2013
6 comments:
I don't blame the recipients. Everyone needs to plan for their retirement and if a government or corporation offers one, why blame the recipient? The people at fault are those boards and administrators who gave the types of pensions they did for short term political popularity, while sacrificing stable long-term pension planning with various ponzi schemes.
Places like Detroit and plans like Calpers are not in trouble because of the pensioners, but because their predecessors wrote contracts that governments are incapable of honoring.
In a world of sound principled governance, such political grandstanding would be cause for termination of the administrator. Instead, in our foolish world, they got reelected.
As in so many other events in our world, it's a matter of politics. Look. Republicans find themselves repudiated in most of the country - Texas, Mississippi and a few other souther states excepted. What to do? What can we seize upon. Oh! public employees' pensions! We'll cherry-pick a few outrageous instances, a few ill-run cities (ill-run not by civil servants in nearly all cases, but by elected officials, most of who undoubtedly ran on platforms of fiscal frugality) and Whee! Away we go!
Well said, Tom! And we must remember that the money received by public employees will help sustain local economies and eliminate their need for public assistance in these troubled economic times. If more time were spent developing policies that would actually help our workers, instead of belittling their contributions, we'd all be better off.
I really liked your pension post. Would it be OK if I included it in my blog as a guest post?
Thanks for your support, Gordon, Chuck, anonymous and Ron.
I am glad that Gordon doesn’t blame the pension recipients. What I don’t understand is why so many pension funds are going broke even though the vast majority of pensioners are not receiving extravagant benefits.
I hope that Chuck is right, and that the outrageous instances are not representative of the whole picture.
Anonymous is right that pensioners are an important group of consumers, without whose spending local economies would do badly, so impoverishing pensioners is counterproductive.
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