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Economy
Public Employees Living Large in Midst of Deep Recession - Train Wreck Coming?
2010-01-27
Since December 2007, when the current downturn began, the ranks of federal employees earning $100,000 and up has skyrocketed. According to a recent analysis by USA Today, federal workers making six-figure salaries - not including overtime and bonuses - “jumped from 14 percent to 19 percent of civil servants during the recession's first 18 months.'' The surge has been especially pronounced among the highest-paid employees. At the Defense Department, for example, the number of civilian workers making $150,000 or more quintupled from 1,868 to 10,100. At the recession's start, the Transportation Department was paying only one person a salary of $170,000. Eighteen months later, 1,690 employees were drawing paychecks that size.

All the while, the federal government has been adding jobs at a 10,000-a-month clip. Between December 2007 and June 2009, federal payrolls exploded by nearly 10 percent. “Federal workers are enjoying an extraordinary boom time in pay and hiring,'' USA Today observes, “during a recession that has cost 7.3 million jobs in the private sector.'' And to add public-sector insult to private-sector injury, data from the Office of Personnel Management show the average federal salary is now roughly $71,000 - about 76 percent higher than the average private salary.

Needless to say, it isn't only at the federal level that government pay and perks increasingly outstrip those in the private sector.

In Ohio, a joint reporting effort by the state's eight largest newspapers found that even in a time of severe budget cuts, “one expense government leaders have not cut is pensions for their workers.'' The annual public pension tab in Ohio, currently $4.1 billion, is growing by around $700 million per year. “Retirement incomes for the most experienced government employees top out at 88 percent of their active-duty pay,'' writes James Nash of the Columbus Dispatch. “Unlike most private-sector workers, whose retirement is driven by the strength of the stock market and 401(k) plans, government employees' pensions are guaranteed.''

Moreover, government retirees in Ohio enjoy taxpayer-provided health care, and in many cases can retire at 48. Especially egregious are “double-dippers'' - public employees who “retire'' and get a full pension while returning to work and collecting a paycheck. In 2009, double-dippers were paid nearly a billion dollars by Buckeye State public-pension systems.

Ohio is hardly unique. A public-pension tsunami is beginning to inundate government budgets at every level. As more and more of taxpayers' earnings are confiscated to fund outsize public-sector benefits, the backlash from the private sector will only grow angrier and more intense.

“We are about to get run over by a locomotive,'' warned California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in his State of the State address this month. Over the past decade, he said, pension costs for state employees swelled 2,000 percent - but revenues only increased 24 percent. The state has had to come up with funds to close that gap - funds diverted from “our universities, our parks, and other government functions.''

Public-employee unions fiercely defend their pay and pensions, but even union-friendly Democrats are starting to acknowledge the inevitable. “The deal used to be that civil servants were paid less than private sector workers in exchange for an understanding that they had job security for life,'' former San Francisco mayor and California Assembly speaker Willie Brown recently wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle. “But we politicians, pushed by our friends in labor, gradually expanded pay and benefits . . . while keeping the job protections and layering on incredibly generous retirement packages . . . Talking about this is politically unpopular . . . But at some point, someone is going to have to get honest about the fact.''

A showdown is coming, and more likely sooner than later. Taxpayers will put up with a lot, but their patience has its limits.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#4  Anguper Hupomosing9418
I take it you and I speak a different variant of English....
Nobody covered the pensions of United etc...
They were garnished by the bankruptcy judge to pay off the corporation's creditors.
None of them covered the United workers.... rather robbed them....
Posted by: 3dc   2010-01-27 22:56  

#3  Hey,,, pensions in the private sector have been taken over by creditors when under bankruptcy... IANAL, but AFAICT there is no obligation for creditors to do this. Go to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. web site & read some of the entries. Many of them read like this: The PBGC stepped in because the pension plan faced abandonment after the company, in bankruptcy, sold substantially all of it assets to buyers unwilling to assume the plan.
It is lunacy for anyone to assume the liability of a defined-benefit pension plan without a huge pile of cash to lessen the pain. It is lunacy for state & local governments to attempt to support such. As we will see.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-27 20:42  

#2  Hey,,, pensions in the private sector have been taken over by creditors when under bankruptcy...
United and the car companies come quickly to mind.

Since all Governments now appear to be bankrupt or close to it... by the same logic their pensions should be void...

Or does the private worker exist in a different exalted state than the public worker to moronic Federal Judges?
Posted by: 3dc   2010-01-27 20:22  

#1  --- The core of the problem is that the public cannot afford to pay much longer for the GIGANTIC defined-benefits public pensions their rulers have bound them to by contract.
--- Unfortunately the writer did not give of total the expected future liability for public pensions. He just mentioned recent annual outlays.
--- IANAL & AFAICT, the only way out is bankruptcy of the public organizations who have gotten into this fix, and turning over the obligation to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, which at some point, will also require a taxpayer bailout.
--- Just recently was published the news that the majority of union workers in this country are now working for the government. This happened as union workers for the private sector have lost their jobs.
--- Someone remind me of why unions of public employees are legal in the first place? When that happened, taxpayers lost their ability to run their own governments.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-27 17:24  

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