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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
Dotinga, Randy – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Faculty members and administrators should not assume that their colleges will pick up their medical bills during their retirement. Medicare benefits are not guaranteed that they will remain the same. Experts believe that the Medicare trust fund that pays for retiree hospital care will go bankrupt by 2019. As such, insurance experts are now urging…
Descriptors: Retirement Benefits, Health Insurance, Health Care Costs, College Faculty
Smith, Elizabeth Ettema; Guthrie, James W. – National Center on Performance Incentives, 2009
Teacher pensions are fast becoming a significant issue in education policy. Mounting unfunded pension financial liability, likely larger numbers of retiring teachers, increasing mobility among existing teachers, and unfavorable comparisons with less generous private sector pension plans all contribute to putting pedagogues pensions in the public…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Retirement Benefits, Incentives, Teacher Retirement
McGinnis, John O.; Schanzenbach, Max – Policy Review, 2010
State and local governments today are, with few exceptions, in deep financial distress. While some governors can offer the recession, the housing crisis, or the loss of an important industry as an excuse for poor finances, many states are simply structurally insolvent. In this article, the authors discuss the primary cause of the states' long-term…
Descriptors: Financial Problems, Government Employees, Unions, Retirement Benefits
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
Haskvitz, Alan – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2011
The teaching profession has long been thought of as recession proof. Indeed, that may have been one of the reasons why teachers took far lower starting salaries right out of college. Perhaps the greatest common feature of teachers, besides their desire to serve society in a humanitarian way, may be the lack of risk-taking the occupation previously…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Parent School Relationship, Job Layoff, Risk
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
At colleges, presidents, provosts, and even faculty senates are taking a fresh look at how to manage professors' retirements. A few institutions that have sought to trim their tenured-faculty ranks for other reasons offer early lessons for those institutions that want to encourage retirements. Many institutions are doing just that, using…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Retirement, Governance, College Governing Councils
McNeil, Michele – Education Week, 2008
Even as they grapple with budget pressures from a sagging national economy, states are being forced to make tough decisions on how they will cope with an even more severe longterm fiscal concern: a projected price tag pushing $3 trillion to pay the pensions and health insurance of retired teachers and other government employees. Those commitments…
Descriptors: Teacher Retirement, Health Insurance, Retirement Benefits, State Government
Luca, John J. – American Journal of Business Education, 2009
On August 17, 2006, President George W. Bush signed into law the Pension Protection Act (PL 109-280). The 907-page federal law has been referred to as the most comprehensive reform of the nation's pension law since the enactment of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974 (Lucas, 2008). This paper will examine the major…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Public Policy, Policy Analysis, Retirement Benefits
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
Costrell, Robert; Podgursky, Michael – Education Next, 2009
The ongoing global financial crisis is forcing many employers, from General Motors to local general stores, to take a hard look at the costs of the compensation packages they offer employees. For public school systems, this will entail a consideration of fringe benefit costs, which in recent years have become an increasingly important component of…
Descriptors: Teacher Salaries, Public Schools, Fringe Benefits, Teacher Retirement
Baum, Sandy; Ma, Jennifer; Payea, Kathleen – College Board, 2013
This report documents differences in the earnings and employment patterns of U.S. adults with different levels of education. It also compares health-related behaviors, reliance on public assistance programs, civic participation, and indicators of the well-being of the next generation. Financial benefits are easier to document than nonpecuniary…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Adults, Educational Attainment, Income
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
Hess, Frederick M.; Squire, Juliet P. – Policy Review, 2010
The vast majority of public employees--including teachers--are enrolled in defined-benefit pension plans. These plans are usually the product of state legislation that determines eligibility, benefit formulas, employer and employee contributions, and how payments will be calculated when an employee retires or leaves the system. Once an employee…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Elementary Secondary Education, Public School Teachers, 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