Unfunded Liabilities Won't Go Away | Eastern North Carolina Now

While unfunded liabilities continue to garner plenty of attention in the press, I fear a lack of understanding means this attention is failing to translate into legislative action.

ENCNow
   Publisher's note: The author of this fine report is Fergus Hodgson, who is Director of Fiscal Policy Studies of the John Locke Foundation, is published here in the Carolina Journal, John Hood Publisher.

    RALEIGH     While unfunded liabilities continue to garner plenty of attention in the press, I fear a lack of understanding means this attention is failing to translate into legislative action. Despite a relatively simple reform available to stem the tide at the state level -- defined-contribution pensions -- unfunded liabilities keep on growing.

    I remember when someone first introduced me to the concept, I had a difficult time getting my head around it. Put most simply, unfunded liabilities are debts -- money owed to creditors -- but they have been labeled in such a way that they are not recorded on an ongoing basis. This labeling may also mean they are not legally enforceable.

    Social Security is a clear example. When you pay these taxes (or "contributions," as they're euphemistically known), one assumes that the federal government owes you this money back when you retire. Even if not legally enforceable, the political pressure is sufficient that federal officials have paid the debts for almost 80 years now, and the generosity of these benefits has only expanded over the decades.

    Unfortunately, federal officials have labeled these taxes as revenues and spent them, even though these collections have generated obligations at the same time. If we were to call your Social Security taxes "loans" to the federal government, along with other entitlements such as Medicare, we would have a completely different picture of the debt situation.

    According to Laurence Kotlikoff, an economist I hold in high regard, if one accounts for unfunded liabilities, the U.S. debt is $211 trillion. It almost makes the official debt of nearly $16 trillion look like pennies and is worse than that of Greece. I encourage people to read his book, The Coming Generational Storm.

    On the state level, the Institute for Truth in Accounting has just released a ranking of debt per taxpayer, and it includes unfunded liabilities. The Institute places North Carolina at No. 35 in the nation, with the 16th-highest debt per taxpayer at $14,800.

    A little context suggests why these liabilities are in urgent need of address if a default is to be avoided. The $14,800 comes from numbers available at Dec. 31, 2010. Just one year prior, the number was $11,200 per taxpayer. That's an increase of 32 percent.

    The state employee system of retirement medical benefits and pensions is most in need of address, and would best be converted to defined contributions rather than defined benefits. That would mean money set aside now at an assured level as opposed to promises for future payouts without sufficient funding to support them. The conversion would not do away with the accrued debt, but it would stop the situation from worsening immediately.

    The defined-contribution approach is not so easily applied to Social Security. That program is such a mess, I encourage a simple opt-out option, as promoted by Ron Paul in his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published )
Enter Your Comment ( text only please )




Eric Holder's Got Some 'Splainin to Do! John Locke Foundation Guest Editorial, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics Second Primary Run-off Election: Mattie Lawson Prevails


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

"Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a foolish man, full of foolish and vapid ideas," former Governor Chris Christie complained.
Bureaucrats believe they set policy for spending taxpayer dollars usurping the directions of elected officials.
would allow civil lawsuit against judge if released criminal causes harm
"This highly provocative move was designed to interfere with our counter narco-terror operations."

HbAD1

Charlie Kirk, 31 years of age, who was renowned as one of the most important and influential college speakers /Leaders in many decades; founder of Turning Point USA, has been shot dead at Utah Valley University.
The Trump administration took actions against Harvard related to the anti-Israel protests that roiled its campus.
In remembrance of the day that will forever seer the concept of 'evil' in our minds, let's look back at that fateful morning, exactly 11 years ago today to that series of horrific events which unfolded before our unbelieving eyes......

HbAD2

 
Back to Top