California Pension Spiking Case Nears End in Court Showdown

Public sector workers want to strike down a provision that stops them from winning higher benefits in retirement.

Government workers made their final arguments to the California Supreme Court on Tuesday in a controversial case deliberating whether public pension benefits can be reduced by the state legislature. The court’s decision is expected by mid-summer at the latest.

Public sector unions in Alameda, Contra Costa, and Merced counties in California are hoping to strike down a provision in former California Gov. Jerry Brown’s 2012 pension reform law that curbed pension spiking for all employees, including those hired before the law was enacted. 

The practice allows workers to increase their retirement income by cashing out balances from vacation days, sick days, or on-call days, and adding them to their final salaries. Unlike many private workers, public employees can accumulate time off throughout their entire working career. 

Similar cases from public employees have pushed through judicial courts since the former state governor’s Public Employees’ Pension Reform Act (PEPRA) went into effect. 

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Lawyers for public sector unions argue that the provision is unconstitutional because it cuts benefits for employees who were hired prior to the law. Employees hired before 2013 could see their retirement payments reduced by up to 15%. 

Plaintiffs say that erodes employee trust and sets a dangerous precedent. “The government entered into a financial contract, and then said, ‘I’m not going to pay what I said I’d pay,’” said David Mastagni, the legal representative for Alameda County Deputy Sheriff’s Association, one of the plaintiffs. 

But PEPRA supporters argue the reform addresses the state pension system’s funding crisis, which is adding pressure to the California government’s budget. The law also raised the retirement age and increased worker contributions. 

When the state Supreme Court discloses its verdict sometime in the next 90 days, it’s expected to have wide-ranging implications for state governments, especially in regard to whether they can make adjustments to state retirement systems. Four of the current seven state justices were appointed by Brown. 

That could be of interest to other states, including Illinois, which is struggling under the weight of a massively underfunded pension system, especially as the coronavirus pandemic adds pressure to government budgets. Illinois recently asked Washington for $10 billion to help fund its liabilities.

For investment chiefs, whose returns typically make up 63% of public pension fund revenues, the verdict will determine how much pressure is on them to generate risk-adjusted returns. 

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Re-Opening the Economy Won’t Do Stocks Much Good, Says Yale Expert

Portent: Chinese consumers remain fearful about going out after lockdown lifted, ex-Morgan Stanley honcho Roach warns.

The stock market is bouncing back nicely from its painful February-March wipeout, amid optimism that the economy will recover in light of moves to lift lockdowns across the United States.

Not so fast, says Yale University senior fellow Stephen Roach, a well-known China expert who used to be Morgan Stanley’s Asia chairman. Reason: Open it, and they will not come. In other words, consumers likely will have no appetite to risk venturing from their homes to shop and work.

“Chinese consumers remain fearful of going out in public, shopping, going to movies, and enjoying activities that put them in close proximity with their neighbors,” he said. “Consumer behavior is not all that dissimilar in populations subjected to an unprecedented shock in their health security.”

Nevertheless, the S&P 500 has rallied from its March 23 low, despite yet another surge in jobless claims, which hit 33 million this week. The benchmark closed Thursday up 1.1%, an advance mirrored by the other two indexes, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (up 0.89%) and the Nasdaq Composite (positive 1.41%). Some states are making plans to open up for business in coming weeks, at least partially.

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A Monmouth University poll this week found that the public, by a 2-1 ratio, was more concerned about lifting restrictions too quickly than too slowly. But President Donald Trump is concerned about the continued economic fall that the coronavirus has set in motion. “We have to get our country open again,” he said.

No doubt, there’s a terrible problem with mounting unemployment. “We’re going to see a terrible employment report this week,” Roach said, referring to the Friday jobs report that showed employers axed 20.5 million people in April. “How much of that could come back as these service industries are going to have their footprints reduced?”

The Federal Reserve’s commitment to supporting the US financial apparatus, which includes buying corporate bonds, is another driver for investor hopes. Add in prospects for medical advances that thwart COVID-19.

“The market has moved up sharply, anticipating probably an imminent cure or a vaccine and drawing a lot of comfort from the Fed that has opened liquidity spigots as never before. And, we’ve had massive fiscal stimulus,” Roach told CNBC. “It’s a green light for the markets.”

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