NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 31 to 45 of 122 results Save | Export
Buck, Stuart – Foundation for Educational Choice, 2010
The city of San Diego will face enormous budgetary pressures from the growing deficits in public pensions, both at a state and local level. In this policy brief, the author estimates that San Diego faces total of $45.4 billion, including $7.95 billion for the county pension system, $5.4 billion for the city pension system, and an estimated $30.7…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Budgets, Retirement, Costs
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Friedberg, Leora; Turner, Sarah – Education Finance and Policy, 2010
While the retirement security landscape has changed drastically for most workers over the last twenty years, traditional defined benefit (DB) pension plans remain the overwhelming norm for K-12 teachers. Because DB plans pay off fully with a fixed income after retirement only if a teacher stays in the profession for decades and yield little or…
Descriptors: Teacher Supply and Demand, Incentives, Teacher Characteristics, Influences
Thornton, Saranna – American Association of University Professors, 2010
Rough financial seas had been buffeting many colleges and universities for years before the recession that began in late 2007. Then in mid-September 2008, an economic tsunami crashed into campuses, challenging their ability to provide the accessible, high-quality education necessary to achieve long-term national goals. As the economy weakened at…
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), Economic Status, College Faculty, Annual Reports
Buck, Stuart – Foundation for Educational Choice, 2010
California has promised its public employees lavish pensions and retiree health benefits without setting aside nearly enough money to pay for those benefits. As a result, California already admits to a $75.5 billion shortfall in paying for these promises to public employees--$40.5 billion for the teachers' retirement plan (California State…
Descriptors: Urban Areas, Budgets, Retirement, Costs
Barro, Josh – Center for State and Local Leadership, 2011
In 2010, the pension plans of state and local governments came under increased scrutiny in response to their generally weak financial positions and mounting costs to taxpayers. By some measures, these funds are as much as $3 trillion short of the assets they would need to cover the promises they have made to government workers and retirees.…
Descriptors: Federal Government, State Government, Local Government, Government Employees
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Costrell, Robert M.; Podgursky, Michael – Education Finance and Policy, 2010
While it is generally understood that defined benefit pension systems concentrate benefits on career teachers and impose costs on mobile teachers, there has been very little analysis of the magnitude of these effects. The authors develop a measure of implicit redistribution of pension wealth among teachers at varying ages of separation. Compared…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Educational Finance, Retirement Benefits, Costs
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Hess, Frederick M.; Squire, Juliet P. – Education Finance and Policy, 2010
The tension at the heart of pension politics is the incentive to satisfy today's claimants in the here and now at the expense of long-term concerns. Teacher pensions, in particular, pose two challenges. The first is that political incentives invite irresponsible fiscal stewardship, as public officials make outsized short-term commitments to…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Public Officials, Labor Market, Retirement Benefits
Eisele-Dyrli, Kurt – District Administration, 2010
The financial state of the nation's public pension funds--which provide the retirement incomes for all state employees but in most states are dominated by teachers, administrators, and other school employees--has gone from bad to worse, and is projected to continue to worsen in coming decades. A perfect storm of factors has combined in the past…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Retirement Benefits, Educational Finance, Trend Analysis
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Costrell, Robert M.; Podgursky, Michael – Education Finance and Policy, 2009
This article examines the pattern of incentives for work versus retirement in six state teacher pension systems. We do this by examining the annual accrual of pension wealth from an additional year of work over a teacher's career. Accrual of wealth is highly nonlinear and heavily loaded at arbitrary years that would normally be considered…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Finance Reform, Retirement Benefits, Personnel Policy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Clark, Robert L. – Education Finance and Policy, 2010
Most public elementary and high school teachers are covered by health insurance provided by their employer while they are employed. In most cases, these health plans are managed at the state level. At retirement, teachers with sufficient years of service are allowed to remain in the health plan. Retiree health plans for teachers vary widely across…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Public School Teachers, Health Insurance, Government Employees
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Costrell, Robert M.; McGee, Josh B. – Education Finance and Policy, 2010
The authors analyze the Arkansas teacher pension plan and empirically gauge the behavioral response to incentives embedded in that plan and to possible reforms. The pattern of pension wealth accrual creates sharp incentives to work until eligible for early or normal retirement, often in one's early fifties, and to separate shortly thereafter. We…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Incentives, Decision Making, Teacher Motivation
National Commission on Teaching and America's Future, 2010
Working with Richard Ingersoll, professor of Education and Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania, the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future (NCTAF) examined and analyzed data from the "Schools and Staffing Survey" (SASS), the largest and most comprehensive source of data on teachers, gathered from a nationally…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Retirement, Baby Boomers, Retirement Benefits
Petrilli, Michael J.; Roza, Marguerite – Thomas B. Fordham Institute, 2011
After years of non-stop increases--national k-12 per-pupil spending is up by "one-third" in inflation-adjusted dollars since 1995--schools now face the near-certainty of repeated annual budget cuts for the first time since the Great Depression. In some states and districts, reductions will be dramatic--well into the double digits. And…
Descriptors: Baby Boomers, Budgets, Public Education, Expenditure per Student
Hansen, Janet S.; Podgursky, Michael J.; Costrell, Robert M. – National Center on Performance Incentives, 2009
This policy brief summarizes findings presented at a February 2009 research conference on teacher retirement systems hosted by the National Center on Performance Incentives (NCPI) at Vanderbilt University's Peabody College. The 2009 conference was the second in a series of NCPI events focusing on findings from recent research on issues related to…
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Secondary School Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Retirement
Lawton, Stephen B. – School Business Affairs, 2009
In April 2009, a high school principal in a large Arizona school district met individually with 18 of his most senior teachers to inform them that they would not have a job the following year. Why didn't tenure protect them from wholesale dismissal? The answer is they all had one thing in common: they were retirees who had been leased or hired…
Descriptors: Principals, High Schools, Boards of Education, Teacher Supply and Demand
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9