PRIVATE-SECTOR WORKERS SHOULD HAVE ACCESS TO GOLD-STANDARD STATE PENSIONS
NEW SCHOOL LABOR ECONOMIST, RETIREMENT EXPERT TERESA GHILARDUCCI UNVEILS NEW PLAN

Bill Lockyer, California State Treasurer:
"A meaningful retirement security option for California private sector workers"

NEW YORK, November 10, 2011 - As retirement plan coverage declines nationwide and Congress fails to articulate a solution at the federal level, Teresa Ghilarducci, director of The New School's Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis (SCEPA), has announced a proposal to offer low-fee, low-risk personal retirement accounts to all workers by providing private-sector labor access to state-level public retirement institutions.

Calling the proposal "a meaningful retirement security option for California private sector workers," California State Treasurer Bill Lockyer lauded Ghilarducci's plan in a speech last month at the 21st Annual Northern California Public Retirement Seminar. Lockyer noted that Ghilarducci's plan promises to "make a major dent in the [pension] gap between public and private workers."

Ghilarducci's plan opens state pension funds to new customers from the private sector. Private-sector workers or employers could voluntarily open an account in a state-level public retirement fund such as the California Public Employees' Retirement System or CalPERS. Workers and/or employers would contribute at least five percent of pay into an account guaranteed to earn at least three percent above inflation. At retirement, workers would have the option to convert their savings into an annuity, a guaranteed stream of income for life.

"The recession's effects on state budgets has diverted the discussion about pension reform to the promises made to public sector retirees,” said Ghilarducci. "While state officials debate how to reform public pensions, all workers deserve access to safe, effective retirement plans. Private-sector workers have been, and will continue to be, battered by the double jeopardy of increasing market risk in their 401(k)s and decreasing employer coverage. Opening a window for private workers in high performing public pension funds provides a practical blueprint to stave off an impending retirement crisis."

The proposal takes advantage of existing state pension infrastructure to invest private-sector funds. States, through their employee pension plans, sponsor not-for-profit financial institutions that consistently receive the highest returns for the least cost. In fact, public pension plans outperformed 401(k) plans or IRA accounts by 20 to 40% over the last 30 years. These funds are able to use their bargaining power to lower fees, and public pension fund traders have a longer-term view, which stabilizes markets and protects individuals from swings in asset prices.

All states could offer a similar structure overseen by an independent board of trustees and administered like TIAA-CREF - the pension plan for university professors - or the Thrift Savings Plan for federal employees. Pension contributions would be pooled and invested professionally with an emphasis on prudent and low-risk, long-term gains. This would effectively shield workers from the high fees and poor investment choices they face when left to fend for themselves in the retail market. Most importantly, these accounts would be portable, allowing a worker to continue investing in the account as they move from job to job. Though these funds would be kept in a separate investment pool from public sector funds, having private sector workers invested in the same system would shore up public support for state public pension funds.

Ghilarducci's plan is detailed in "Meeting California's Retirement Security Challenge," published October, 2011 by the University of California at Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education.

ABOUT THE SCHWARTZ CENTER FOR ECONOMIC POLICY ANALYSIS (SCEPA)
SCEPA is an economic policy think tank located within the Department of Economics at The New School for Social Research. SCEPA works to focus the public economics debate on the role government can and should play in the real productive economy – that of business, management, and labor – to raise living standards, create economic security, and attain full employment. With a focus on collaboration and outreach, SCEPA provides original, standards-based research to engage the public, opinion leaders and elected officials in the discussion of how to create a more stable, equitable, and prosperous economy. For more information, visit www.economicpolicyresearch.org.

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