Tag Archives: management
Social Security Not Nearly So Bad…
Previously I blogged about retirement systems since they were getting a lot of negative attention in the Florida Legislature and in Congress. One of my tenets was that the economy is more of an issue in dealing with the sustainability of retirement systems than most other factors. Specifically I outlined the current Social Security issues, noting that the long-term borrowing rate and number of people paying into the system affected the apparent long-term viability at any given point in time. I also suggested that as a result, trying to opine about the viability of any retirement system at a specific point in time is a futile exercise, unless there is some underlying political agenda. The economics changes constantly, so the long-term trends are far better means to view the viability of pension programs. After the 2008 economic collapse, few retirement systems looked like they were in good shape, yet a few years earlier, they appeared much better, much like Florida’s did..
Fast forward to 2013. After all the hoopla in Congress about the fate of Social Security and scary Congressional statements that Social Security will not be remain for future retirees unless drastic changes are made, guess what? The annual trustees’s report on Social Security (and you though Congress managed it!) reported that as a result of the economic uptick in the past couple years, the outlook for Social Security in the short term is good, and the long-term is far better than it has been in years. Surprised? Only if you don’t understand how pension systems work. The economy has improved, so the investments made by Social Security likely are getting a better return. The jobless rate has dropped, and more people are paying into the system, precisely the two things that improve the long-term sustainability of any pension system. But we don’t hear Congress talking about that because that doesn’t address the political agenda.
Worse for certain Congressional leaders, the report suggests that Social Security is positioned better than many 401K programs, the type of system some in Congress suggest should be the future of Social Security, because the risk are far lower with Social Security’s investment strategy than any 401k invested in the marketplace. They noted that most 401k programs lost half their value in the 2008 financial collapse, while Social Security’s portfolio, invested in far more conservatively, did not see near the same type of drop in investment value. The report outlined that the lower and middle class retirees were hit less severely buy the 2008 downturn than upper middle class pensioners who relied more on 401K returns. That should be no surprise either.
The findings are particularly important for lower and middle class families that receive 2/3 of their retirement income from Social Security as private pension systems become a thing of the past. Those private pension programs suffered from investments in private companies that can have shifting stock values and outsourcing of jobs to other countries – more risk and fewer payees equals unsustainable pension program. No surprise the private sector has shed many of those programs, but precisely why Social Security becomes more relevant for most Americans. The private pension systems are precisely the opposite of the Social Security model.
So why the push to try to change retirement programs? Some are in difficulty, especially where there are generous benefits, and fewer people paying in due to cuts in government employees, and at risk investments strategies that have performed poorly. All three are management issues, and the second is a political issue. Bash public employee pensioners, because fewer private entities offer them, seems to be politically popular, but it is a political means to pit people with pensions against those who do not to hide the real issue which is simply money. The investment value of Social Security’s portfolio is huge. Wall Street would love to see that portfolio in the stock market. More investment dollars will drive up stock prices. That seems good, but recall that the repeal of the 1930s vintage banking rules that prohibited banks from investing YOUR savings in the stock market, drove stock prices up fast in the 1990s, but it didn’t turn out so well in 2008. Investing Social Security’s portfolio similarly can be expected to have a similar result. And then, Social Security will really be in trouble and someone in Congress will tell you – I told you so. Maybe the better argument is that all these politicians should keep their fingers out of pension plans.
Radio Program last week
Hi all. Here is another radio show I did last week talking about my company Public Utility Management and Planning Services Inc. and water sustainability. Take a listen. Let me know what you think. Thanks
Fred
Are Pensions Really Broke?
Are Pensions Really Broke?
Nearly 10 years ago it was predicted that the water industry would experience a large exodus of experienced workers. It did not happen; likely it was only delayed by the 2008 financial crisis. If that is the case, will there be an acceleration of retirements in the next few years? If so, what are the plans the plans for knowledge capture? GIS, work orders, MMIS, and other programs will help, but capture is important as the next “generation” of employees will not have the advantage of years of experience in finding valves, and pipes, etc. We need to plan ahead for the knowledge capture issue, develop training for newer employees and figure a means to access lost knowledge in the future. Capture is a big issue, but what we hear more of is the potential for a drain on our resources for funding these retirements? The news is full of stories of dire consequences of retirement defaults coming for the public sector. Keep in mind many utilities are publically owned and these employees are part of the public retirement systems. Is this real or a political position for another agenda? Do we need to be worried?
Interestingly it depends on whether you were looking before 2008 or after. This picture was very different. Even in my state of Florida, the pension system was fully funded before 2008, dropped just after, but has returned to near full funding as a result of the improvement in investment returns. Most of these systems rely on investment returns so changes can cause the system solvency to change rapidly over short periods of time. Looking only at a short instant in time belies the long-term truth and it is the longer view we need to look at. Good thing Wall Street normally goes up, but the impact of poor investment strategies by a limited few (2008) has significant impacts across society in everyone’s pension programs. Look at all the 401k programs – those incurred crushing blows just as pension programs did. So yes there may be problems, but many of these pension systems are not nearly as strapped as you would be led to believe in part because they have always relied on people continuing to pay into the system. Hence they always have cash flow, unlike personal accounts.
The long-term view or the impact on personal accounts doesn’t faze the “fixers” who have many ideas to “fix” the pension problem. One of the concepts championed is to change enrollment to a 401k vs a fixed benefit system. Another camp suggests privatizing. But both radically change the long-term solvency of vested employees and here’s why. Under the current concept for public retirement systems, your employer and often you, pay matching amounts into the system. According to a study done some years back in Florida, over 80% of people who get public sector jobs do not stay long enough to become vested in the system. That means that while they get their contributions back, the retirement system keeps the match, reducing long term costs to the public. All full time employees pay into the system. Retirement systems rely on cash flow from current employees for payouts to retirees, thereby protecting the invested funds and allowing the system to “weather” periodic financial difficulties. That’s why the system solvency will based on what is happening on the stock market. The system is designed to grow at a given rate, so if you reduce the people paying in, you accelerate the use of invested dollars because the cash flow diminishes. In many respects that is what happened to some of the industrial pension systems –automation and outsourcing jobs overseas cut down the payees so much that the pension system could not sustain itself. So it’s relatively easy to demonstrate that both cutting jobs through privatizing and 401k type programs accelerate the crisis and will create future burdens on the taxpaying public. These two solutions sound great, but are simply unsound.
There are other ways to mess up retirement systems. The federal workforce has decreased from 6.6 million in the late 1960s to 4.5 million today. Clearly the reduction in employees contributing will have an impact on significant federal pensions. Florida and many other states, with the windfalls on the late 1990s, reduced vesting from 10 years to 5 or 6. That means that a greater percent of people will become vested, which means more future obligations. That’s not a solution for solvency. Florida’s legislature changed the contributions from only the government entity paying (a total of 10.4%) and required employees to contribute. The employee match is their money and they get it back with interest, meaning only 7./4% remains in the system. If experience with social security and other states is an indication, both shares will have to increase so that their combined total will be in the 13-14% range. How did hat save anyone money?
So what’s the solution? Two things. First, the initial way these pension plans were set up were actuarially sound. They should be revisited for contribution amounts, vesting period and expected return rates on investments (one of social security’s issues is that they own so many Treasury bonds that pay under 2% that it is hard to get a valuable rate of return). This is a project for experts, not policians to consider and evaluate. The big issue though is age for retirement. I know this is not popular, but let’s talk social security here as an example. The text of the 1935 Social Security Act says that benefits were to be granted at age 65 (Section 202). However the average age that people live to was 60 for men and 64 for women, meaning the average person NEVER collected social security. Now it is 76 and 81, which means they collect for 12 to 15 years, tremendous difference in the obligations. We all appreciate good medicine and most look forward to retirement, but keep in mind it comes with a price. Since 50 is the new 30, we probably will all probably can be working longer.
Water and sewer workers like police and fire, are vital to thriving communities. So, let’s act with caution when looking at fiscal impacts that may come to utilities in the future. Since many of these folks have, and have worked hard to secure a retirement package, it will need to be funded. But we must act judiciously when making changes to the current program. Cut off payees – and ratepayers will make up the difference. Change the type of program, and the potential for major losses occurs.
Does Delaying Decisions on Infrastructure Help Us?
If you live on an island, and your groundwater table is tidal, what should your datum be for storm water planning purposes? Average tide? High tide? Seasonal high tide? If you are the local official with this problem, what do you do, realizing that the difference from mean tide and seasonal high tide (when most flooding occurs) is 1.5 feet? Realizing that property and infrastructure is at much higher risk for periodic inundation, does the failure to address the problem indicate a lack of willingness, understanding, hope or leadership? We see all four responses among local officials, but the “head in the sand” mode is the most curious. It’s tough challenges that often define leaders. With sea level rise, there is time to plan, construct infrastructure in stages, arrange funding, and lengthen the life of infrastructure and property. Meanwhile, those insurers, banks and the public we talked about in a prior blog wait and watch.
Talk Radio discussion
Hi All.
This is a radio show I did this week. One of 4 I have scheduled. It talks about me and my company, outlook, thoughts. Take a listen. Let me know what you think!
Fred
Planning for Change (like sea level rise)
After my last post, I was asked about sea level rise and how to get started with the issue in a very “red” area as it was characterized. I have come to the conclusion that the insurance industry will make sea level rise real for politicians in those places where it is impermissible for bureaucrats to discuss it. Here’s why. Say you have a house in a low lying area that is vulnerable to sea level rise and/or storm surge. One is permanent, the other temporal, but in both cases are potentially catastrophic if you live in this house. You bought the house, got a loan for 80 or 90% of its value and then got insurance for it. Now the insurance is there to insure that if your house gets swept away or damaged, there will be enough money to pay off your loan. That’ s what many people miss. Insurance is for the bank, no you, which is why your loan documents require that you get and hold insurance while you have the house. After your loan is paid off, there is no such requirement.
Now let’s say we are out 20 years. You have enjoyed your house but have decided to sell it. Now the banks will value it and are willing to loan say 80% of its value. They of course assume that the house will increase in value with time so even if you make no improvements, if they have to foreclose on it they will get their money back (a major part of the problem with the financial crisis of 2008 was they banks could not get their money out of the properties). Even if it doesn’t, as your loan is paid down, their risk decreases. The loan documents require that you get insurance to cover your costs.
So far so good, but what happens when the insurers will not give you insurance for the full value of the property? In Florida the State creates Citizen’s to deal with the fact that private, commercial insurers saw too much risk in coastal areas and refused to issue policies. Now the State and Citizen’s have the risk. Fine, but that isn’t dealing with the same issue – if the insurer think the value of the property will decrease, or the risk increases a lot, they will not issue policies. Or they will revise policies to say they will pay once – but will not insure you for rebuilding. You may think this will not happen, but Citizen’s is already discussing this option. Hence if you lose your house, they will pay you (so you can pay the bank, and then you are on your own. Now the bank may be willing to offer you a distressed property as an options (Welcome to Detroit), but that won’t be in the same risk zone.
Take this further, let’s say Citizen’s for example says we will pay full value if you lose the house but will not insure a rebuild? That means they probably will not give insurance to the guy who wants to buy our house in 20 years. How much is your house worth now? Probably nothing, which means now the bank will be looking at your insurance coverage and say – whoa – if the house is not worth anything on a resale, that means they may not get paid when you sell your house if you sell if before it is paid off (the norm)!! That is an unacceptable risk, and they need a solution. Of course if your house suddenly has no value, it means local governments get no revenue for taxes (good for you, but bad for providing essential services like storm water. You may not believe this discussion is happening, but it is.
So here’s what I think happens. I think the banks figure this out and start looking at vulnerability as a part of loans. I think they start thinking about what the value in 20 or 30 years might be and if they can get their loan monies back out of property. That will slow property values. I think the insurance industry does the same, and working with banks will further set the prices acceptable for vulnerable property. They are not good investments. If you own such property, you may get insurance in the short-term, but long-term your house value may decrease. At some point, your house will have no resale value, unless……
BUT there iis a big caveat to all this. Coastal areas are high value markets. Lots of activity and lots of investment opportunities. It all depends on what is being done to protect those properties, and depending on the federal governments to bail out private property is unrealistic. It is a local issues, so I also think the banks and insurance industry will start looking at what local governments are doing to protect investments in private property. Do they have a sea level rise adaptation plan? Are the storm water systems updated/upgrades/maintained? Are roads, water supplies and sewer systems capable of functioning under the changed condition? Is there a 50 or 100 year vision on how the community adapt to nature? If yes, there is comfort that investments are protected. If everyone’s head is buried in denial…..Detroit’s calling. U-haul anyone?
PS No disrespect to Detroit, my father’s hometown and the home to many of my current and departed family. For those who do not know, Detroit is high, has access to lots of water, sewer, roads, power and lots of land at reasonable cost, along with a jobs and manufacturing history. Perfect opportunity, one not lost on our ancestors.
How Long should the Leadership vision be?
We do 5, 10 and 20 year plans for infrastructure. But how long do we expect to this infrastructure to last? For example, how many roads only last 10 or 20 years? Most roads only seem to grow with time. Ancient Roman roads are the basis for many current roads. We keep adding roads – few are ever abandoned. They simply do not go away. So a 5, 10 or 20 year planning period makes little sense.
Roads are not the only limit. The WPA-era water mains are approaching 80 years old, and still providing good service, and our Clean Water Act-era sewer improvements are approaching 40. Sewer lines are similarly situated. Many water plants are over 70; we celebrate 100 years on many. Again, planning for only 20 years makes little sense in the context of the larger length of time.
More interesting, we rarely borrow money to pay for these projects for less than 20, 30 or 40 years. So our infrastructure outlives our plans and our borrowing. Often permits are less that the borrowing for infrastructure, which can cause stranded capacity in plants that may never be used. Miami-Dade County has such a situation – they are not alone.
Let’s look at this in the context of groundwater withdrawals. There are areas across the US where groundwater levels have fallen. They have fallen because of human activity to pump them for crops and water use. Colorado has a 100 year management plan in the Denver basin which is basically make the water last 100 years. Then what? Texas has shorter plans. The eastern Carolina drained parts of the Black Creek already, so this is not a theoretical western state issue only. How do we address this?
Or let’s go back to Miami-Dade County the outer banks of North Carolina, historical downtown Charleston, SC, and many other venues where sea level rise could impact water, sewer, storm water and roadway infrastructure. As we redevelop those area, should plans look at the true life of those assets (100 years) vs. the 20 year plan?
Both issues involve the sustainability of infrastructure systems, which means the ability to adapt them to changing future conditions. We have known for 10-15 years that stationarity is no longer accepted for future projections. But we need leadership to move the infrastructure planning to the future changing conditions.
More on Leadership
In our prior blogs we talked about leaders and who they were. I got a couple comments about those on the list, and those perhaps not. So perhaps a little more digging is needed to illustrate the points. For the purposes of this commentary, let’s focus on the social leaders, often political in nature. Again, let’s do this based on quick perceptions, as opposed to deeper digging, because perception shapes our reality. I was asked about George Washington. In many respects Washington was our first “leader” in the Presidency, but his actions there were mostly non-descript. He is mostly remembered as a good wartime general. Even then, there was really nothing to indicate he was or would be a great leader in government except that everyone respected him because of his accomplishments. Keep in mind leaders are measured by their followers, so given the amount of respect for his accomplishment she commanded, Washington had many followers. But perhaps his greatest demonstration of leadership was his refusal to become our king. He noted that he had led an effort to avoid a monarchy and thought it disrespectful to those that had fallen to recreate one. He led the revolution for change, but a permanent change. He was supportive of the crazy radical liberal thinkers who actually had the audacity to think that a democracy by the people could really work. We have no appreciation of just how crazy this idea was in 1776 because we have lived it as the norm for over 200 years. But in 1776, it was anything but the norm, and the leadership in creating that democracy should rightfully be laced on James Madison, Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe, all of whom played major parts in developing the Federalist papers, Constitution and Declaration of Independence. All had a vision of what the US could be and were able to bring others along to implement it. Each was perhaps more of a leader as President than Washington.
But our first great leader was Lincoln, who was not always that popular as President. Again there was nothing particularly distinguishing about Lincoln that would lead one to think he would be a great leader, but the struggles Lincoln had faced throughout his life had prepared him for the darkest hours of the young USA. He inherited a situation where half the country had an economy based on slave labor, did not recognize slaves as people but as property, were determined to maintain their way of life and were willing to risk armed conflict to preserve it regardless of the impact on the young union. Prior presidents and Congresses had refused to alter the status quo to keep the peace, which really festered the issue for many years and hardened positions further. When the CSA attacked Fort Sumter and Lincoln acted. Lincoln set a course to protect the union at all costs. He refused to recognize the CSA as a legitimate nation (which would later make their re-entry to the union easier), instituted marshal law by executive declaration and set about to rework (change) the federal bureaucracy to support the wartime effort. He recognized that money would be an issue, so he set a competitor, Salmon P. Chase, to create the central banking system, a major change in how a government did business. Marshal law restricted activity that might be detrimental to the union, a radical departure from the past. He bided his time before the change to emancipate former slaves by executive proclamation, and allowing them to fight as full members of the army. He updated the military, and despite setbacks with generals, kept changing them until they provided the results he wanted. He pursued new developments in weaponry, yet made sure he engaged the servicemen with frequent visits to the battlefield and hospitals. He created a vision, and became the living personification of it. The citizens of the north bought into his vision and mission and sacrificed significantly. In the end he preserved the union, and offered the rebels readmission with relatively limited penalty. He was unfortunately assassinated prior to seeing his full vision. The ugliness of civil rights that lasted another 100 years likely would not have made Lincoln happy.
Our next leader also inherited a difficult situation – FDR. The nation was at the depths of the Great Depression caused by banking speculation in real estate, economic collapse in Europe and other factors, creating rampant unemployment, and devolved financial system. A few starts and stops aside, FDR convinced Congress to borrow and spend money for construction WPA projects that updated or initiated water, sewer, parks, storm water and roadway projects that updated much of the south and rural areas. He created regulations for banking and securities, including separated banking and investment monies that protected us (until many were repealed in 2000), insured personal banking accounts through the creation of FDIC, created oversight agencies like the SEC, and initiated social security in response to the banking crisis that left many older Americans in poverty, which was the start of the societal social net. In the second half of his terms, he led a frightened nation to victory in WWII, setting up the greatest economic boom on US history. He also died before his vision was fully realized, but his successor, led us through to plan to avoid the errors in dealing with the defeated after WWI, developing the Marshal Plan to rebuild the defeated German and Japanese economies and creating a better model for international communication (United Nations). Both built on changes from past thinking about how to deal with the issues.
The next social leader was never elected: Martin Luther King led us to the completion of Lincoln’s dream to integrate all Americans into one nation. He gained champions in Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, who pushed forward civil rights legislation along with major changes in policy in the form of Medicare and Medicaid. Even Johnson acknowledged that signing the Civil Rights legislation would create a backlash among certain Americans who would abandon his party. But he made the hard choice to change.
Arguments could be made for Teddy Roosevelt, who led us to setting aside parks, and Woodrow Wilson in WWI. It is not a coincidence that President Obama was pursued “Change” as a mantra, although he has yet to be able to institute consensus for a lot of change. For most of the rest of our political leaders, what leadership did they display? Harding? Buchanon? Grant? Andrew Johnson? Taft? Hoover? Tyler? So many others. Leadership is indeed difficult to come by, but leadership is defined by dealing with an opportunity, and the leaders are agents of change to resolve that issue, not the status quo. Too many of our political leaders have desperately attempted to maintain the status quo. As I have mentioned in classes I have taught to elected officials – no one remembers, and no one builds statues to the guy who refused to raise taxes. We remember and build statues to those who implement change, not those that maintain the status quo. And while all changes may not be positive, trying to return to the 1890s, is not leadership.
Challenge or Change – What makes leaders?
Let’s think about great leaders in business and politics in the US. Our two greatest leaders were Lincoln and FDR. Lincoln led us through challenging times, but his means to govern and organization of the federal government was a huge change from those before him. FDR led us through the challenge of the Great Depression and WW2. But government and the world was hugely different as a result of his tenure in Office (and thanks to Truman for completing it).
Other political leaders included all those crazy radical forefathers who had the audacity in 1776 to think that average people could actually govern themselves. We have no conception to day what a crazy idea that was in the 18th century as we take it for granted today. Teddy Roosevelt changed how we viewed open space. But mostly is change that people wrought that made them leaders.
In business, Ford changed how car were made in an effort to sell more at lower costs. Edison changed the world with the light bulb. Los Angeles would not exist if William Mulholland had not conceived of bringing water and power across the mountains. So is it change or challenge that creates leaders? Or both? Or something else?
