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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Altamirano
DATE TYPED 1/31/04
HB
SHORT TITLE Study Changing Educational Retirement System
SB SJM 17
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
Indeterminate Non-Recurring Educational Re-
tirement Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates: HJM 9
Relates to: SB 181, HB 270
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Educational Retirement Board (ERB)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Joint Memorial 17 is 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.
Significant Issues
The purpose of the study is to find out if a defined contribution plan for new education employ-
ees would result in a more financially sound retirement system that would provide the same or
better retirement benefits than the current defined benefit plan as provided for in the Educational
Retirement Act.
pg_0002
Senate Joint Memorial 17 -- Page 2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The cost of the study is unknown.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Duplicates House Joint Memorial 9. Relates to HB 270 and SB 181, both of which propose in-
creasing employer contributions. SB 181 also proposes a new defined benefit plan for future
hires.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
ERB Actuarial Position
ERB’s actuarial position, which represents its long-term ability to pay promised pension benefits
with projected assets, has slipped in recent years. ERB's funded ratio, the actuarial value of as-
sets as a percentage of actuarially accrued liabilities, declined from 81 percent to approximately
75 percent as prior-year investment losses were factored into their June 30, 2004, actuarial study.
The fund's unfunded actuarial liability (the dollar difference between actuarial liability and the
actuarial value of its assets based on assumptions regarding investment income return and demo-
graphic projections), has increased from $1.7 billion to $2.4 billion in the past year. The fund’s
amortization period, which the Governmental Accounting Standards Board states should be less
than 30 years, is infinity. During FY04, contributions of $356 million were $95 million less than
distributions of $451 million.
Rationale for Study
The cost of bringing the current ERB plan back within the 30 year funding period is well over
$100 million. For example, HB 270 proposes increasing the employer contribution from 8.65%
to 16.15% over 8 years at a cost of $152 million. While the defined benefit model is popular, it
remains to be seen if it remains affordable for the State. 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. The disadvantage of a
defined contribution plan is that the member is responsible for allocating their account invest-
ments among plan choices (typically stock, bond, and fixed income mutual funds) and may do so
poorly. The popularity of defined contribution plans tends to track closely to the performance of
the stock market.
A number of states and cities moved from defined benefit plans to defined contribution models
during the 1990’s with mixed results. As a result, hybrid plans have been in development, which
offer a guaranteed retirement benefit (similar to a defined benefit plan), but have an investment
account feature (similar to a defined contribution plan). As part of the study on a defined contri-
bution plan for new employees, the Legislative Finance Committee encourages ERB to look at
these hybrid plans to see if it is possible to provide a fair retirement benefit to future educational
employees at a manageable cost to state taxpayers
.
GGG/yr