Illinois Governor Furious After Pension Fund Cuts Returns Forecast, Sticking Taxpayers With “Crippling” Tax Hike

Earlier this week, we reported of an daunting predicament facing the dramatically underfunded Illinois Teachers Retirement System (TRS), the state’s largest pension fund which is only 41.5% funded: cut its existing future returns assumption from 7.5% to 7.0% (which was previously lowered from 8.0% in 2014) and suffer the wrath of the state’s governor Bruce Rauner, who would be forced to implement even more unpopular tax hikes, or keep its existing projected returns, and potentially suffer an even greater shortfall – and greater taxpayer funding needs – over the long-run if it was unable to hit its bogey.
Despite tremendous political pressure, on Friday afternoon, the Board of Trustees for the Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System, which serves almost 400,000 teachers, voted to cut the assumed rate of return to 7% from 7.5%. “We have to do what we believe is the right thing,’ Richard Ingram, the pension’s executive director, said during the board meeting in Springfield.
As a reminder, Illinois’ fiscal 2017 pension payment to its five retirement systems was estimated at $7.9 billion, up from $7.6 billion in fiscal 2016 and $6.9 billion in fiscal 2015, according to a March report by a bipartisan legislative commission. The country’s fifth-largest state’s unfunded pension liability stood at $111 billion at the end of fiscal 2015, with TRS accounting for more than 55 percent of that gap.
This is how the Chicago Tribune summarized the Pension Fund’s dilemma:

This post was published at Zero Hedge on Aug 27, 2016.