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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Rawson
DATE TYPED 03/01/05 HB
SHORT TITLE Public Employee Defined Contribution Plan
SB 1041
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Im-
pact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
Significant,
see narrative Recurring Public Employees Retire-
ment Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Conflicts with: SB 266 &, SB 507
Relates to: SJM 17 and HJM 9.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Public Employees Retirement Association (PERA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 1041 will require that employees initially employed by a public affiliated employer
on or after July 1, 2006 shall be a member of a defined contribution plan, to be administered by
PERA. SB 1041 will require the PERA Board to submit an operational plan for establishing a
defined contribution plan to the Office of the Governor and the legislature on or before Decem-
ber 15, 2005.
Significant Issues
Replacing the current defined benefit pension plan with a defined contribution plan would repre-
sent a major change in state employee benefit package. A defined contribution model (similar to
a private sector 401K retirement plan and the federal employee retirement plan) offers the advan-
tage of limiting the future liability of the state for benefit payments as well as providing the
member with portability to take their account from employer to employer and to keep account
proceeds in their estate. The disadvantage of a defined contribution plan is that the member is
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Senate Bill 1041 -- Page 2
responsible for allocating their account investments among plan choices (typically stock, bond,
and fixed income mutual funds) and may do poorly. The popularity of defined contribution
plans tends to track closely to the performance of the stock market—if long term market per-
formance is strong, a defined contribution plan might provide a greater benefit than a traditional
pension. If long term market performance lags, or the employee invests poorly, the defined con-
tribution plan benefit will lag compared to a traditional defined benefit pension.
The state will incur costs to create a new defined benefit plan for employees hired on or after
July 1, 2006 and it will have to continue to support the existing pension plan as well. See addi-
tional discussion below under fiscal impact and other substantive issues.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There is no appropriation under the legislation. PERA notes that it will require additional staff
and a budgetary adjustment to finance administration of the new defined contribution plan. Un-
der a traditional defined benefit plan, contribution rates are adjusted to absorb administration
costs to the retirement system. In a defined contribution plan, administrative costs cannot be fac-
tored into contribution rates because monies are deposited directly into the individual employee
account. Employers may be required to be responsible for administrative costs associated with a
defined contribution plan.
There will be a negative fiscal impact to the existing defined benefit plan. A defined contribu-
tion plan such as PERA is dependent on an ongoing active membership, which provides a con-
tinuing revenue stream of revenue in the form of member contributions to finance future accrued
liabilities. While “closing” the existing defined benefit plan to future participants will end future
liabilities, current contribution levels may be insufficient to fund existing accrued liabilities.
The initial cost increase of setting up a defined contribution plan and the cost of continuing to
maintain the current defined benefit plan for all hires before July 1, 2006 would likely be offset
by long term savings to the state by: 1) the likely lower cost of employer contributions to the
plan; and 2) the elimination of state liability for future benefit payments for defined contribution
plan members.
ADMINISTRATIVE ISSUES
SB 1041 would present significant administrative burden to PERA. SB 1041 provides a six-
month period for designing a defined contribution plan structure, including, but not limited to:
establishing contribution rates, plan options, procurement for a third-party administrator and
educational plan for new employees and existing PERA members. PERA will be required to
work with its actuaries and investment consultants to develop a viable alternative retirement plan
that will be actuarially sound and attractive to new public employees.
PERA is currently converting to an integrated pension administration system. PERA manage-
ment and the staff are tasked with the successful implementation of the pension administration
system project. Final conversion to the integrated pension administration system and all compli-
ance issues will not be resolved until December 2005. Diversion of staff to undertake a project
of the magnitude of designing a defined contribution plan and procurement of a third-party ad-
ministrator will adversely impact implementation of the pension administration system.
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Senate Bill 1041 -- Page 3
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Senate Bill 266 creates a new coverage plan with enhanced retirement benefits for juvenile cor-
rectional officers employed by the Children, Youth and Family Department (“CYFD”) ( juvenile
correctional officers accrue 18 months of service credit subsequent to July 1, 2006 to be eligible
for enhanced benefits).
SB 507 adds conservation officer members employed by the Department of Game and Fish to
those employee groups eligible for enhanced retirement benefits provided under State Police
Member and Adult Correctional Officer Coverage Plan 1. (To be eligible to retire with enhanced
benefits, he or she must accrue 36 months of service credit in the plan subsequent to July 1,
2006).
SJM 17 and HJM 9 are Legislative Finance Committee sponsored legislation that will
require the Educational Retirement Board (ERB) to study the implications of moving to a
defined contribution plan for new education employees and submit its findings to the Legislative
Finance Committee by September 30, 2005.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Role of the Defined Benefit Plan in Employee Compensation
PERA provides that for decades, state retirement systems like New Mexico PERA have relied on
the defined benefit model to create strong and reliable retirement plans that represent a signifi-
cant employment benefit for public employees. A defined benefit plan is a guaranteed (and de-
fined) benefit from the retirement system after reaching vesting, age and service requirements.
Under such a plan design, the participant assumes less investment risk because the retirement
system, not the individual employee, assumes the investment responsibility. A defined benefit
plan, by its fundamental design, encourages early retirement with a guaranteed benefit structure.
Many plans, like PERA’s, allow workers to retire in their 50s or early 60s, well before Social
Security’s normal retirement age. Unlike some other state retirement systems nationwide the
State of New Mexico has resisted the impulse to achieve short-term budgetary savings by shift-
ing to a defined contribution pension system that would have shifted the burden of investment
risk to participating public employees individually. Given the protracted economic downturn of
the market, the retention of a defined benefit plan and the avoidance of the personal risk inherent
in a defined contribution plan have immeasurable value for present or potential public employees
in New Mexico.
The PERA retirement system represents a strong recruitment tool for qualified people seeking a
career in public employment in New Mexico. Historically, public employees receive less com-
pensation than employees in the private sector. A defined benefit plan is not designed to fix
short-term problems in state and local governments such as retention and recruitment in lieu of
pay increases. Altering New Mexico’s public pension plan design to accomplish conflicting ob-
jectives will only weaken a successful and generous plan that serves as a powerful incentive to
public employment.
Nationally, public retirement systems that have moved from defined benefit to defined contribu-
tion plans have experienced mixed results. One example, the State of Nebraska has returned to a
mandatory defined benefit plan after a struggling optional defined contribution plan was deemed
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Senate Bill 1041 -- Page 4
unsuccessful (approximately 6% of new employees opted for the defined contribution option).
ALTERNATIVES
The bill could be amended to also authorize a hybrid pension plan, which offers a guaranteed
retirement benefit (similar to a defined benefit plan), but have an investment account feature
(similar to a defined contribution plan).
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL.
PERA will continue to provide retirement security to public employees of the State of New Mex-
ico under a defined benefit structure. The PERA board will continue to administer the PERA
retirement system in a prudent and actuarially sound manner.
GGG/yr