In a recent editorial, The Wall Street Journal reports on state and local pension liabilities as a percentage of state GDP and concludes that politicians have made excessive pension promises.
In fact, pension costs are going up, but the question is whether the rising costs are a result of benefit generosity or of underfunding.
The answer is underfunding.
Pension costs consist of two components: the normal cost, which is the value of benefits earned in a given year, and the amortization payment, which is the annual amount required to pay off the unfunded liability (a liability built up because of past underfunding and optimistic assumptions). The reason pension costs are rising is that the amortization payments are increasing. Normal costs are not increasing (see figure below). Calculating the normal cost using a consistent interest rate across time shows that the average normal cost has remained virtually unchanged at 11.9% of payrolls — that is, plans are not increasing benefit levels.