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November 16, 2010 at 2:09 PM in reply to: OT: Estimated state budget deficit reaches $25.4 billion #631924November 16, 2010 at 2:09 PM in reply to: OT: Estimated state budget deficit reaches $25.4 billion #632053
enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantSome promising news that pension reform at the state level seems to be already happening.
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory?id=12102796&tqkw=&tqshow=
Largest Calif. Employee Union OKs Pension Changes
Members of California’s largest state employee union approved a contract Tuesday that cuts pay by nearly 5 percent for 95,000 government workers and rolls back pension benefits, a move that will protect them from more sweeping government furloughs.
About three-quarters of those who voted ratified the Service Employees International Union Local 1000 contract, after union leaders reached a tentative agreement last month with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. The contract was approved in October by the Legislature as a provision in the state budget and is part of Schwarzenegger’s attempt to control pension costs across all of state government.
http://www.city-journal.org/2010/eon1026sg.html
According to the link above –
Current estimates place California’s unfunded pension debt at somewhere between $300 billion and $500 billion, depending on the predictions one uses of future stock market and investment performance. The good news is that Schwarzenegger did insist that some modest pension reforms be part of the budget deal. But at best, these reforms—requiring increased contributions from many existing public employees and slightly reduced benefits in the defined-benefit pension plans of new state workers, depending on final union negotiations—would shave off $100 billion over the next 30 years. Something more has to be done about pension promises to current workers. But despite Republican legislative pressure for a tougher deal, the budget includes only Schwarzenegger’s limited measures. And state contributions to the pension fund will be rising steeply in coming years, which will put further strain on an already precarious budget.
————————————————-So looks like $100Bn of the $400Bn problem might have been solved!
So is it true or just another smoke and mirrors?
November 16, 2010 at 2:09 PM in reply to: OT: Estimated state budget deficit reaches $25.4 billion #632370enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantSome promising news that pension reform at the state level seems to be already happening.
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory?id=12102796&tqkw=&tqshow=
Largest Calif. Employee Union OKs Pension Changes
Members of California’s largest state employee union approved a contract Tuesday that cuts pay by nearly 5 percent for 95,000 government workers and rolls back pension benefits, a move that will protect them from more sweeping government furloughs.
About three-quarters of those who voted ratified the Service Employees International Union Local 1000 contract, after union leaders reached a tentative agreement last month with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. The contract was approved in October by the Legislature as a provision in the state budget and is part of Schwarzenegger’s attempt to control pension costs across all of state government.
http://www.city-journal.org/2010/eon1026sg.html
According to the link above –
Current estimates place California’s unfunded pension debt at somewhere between $300 billion and $500 billion, depending on the predictions one uses of future stock market and investment performance. The good news is that Schwarzenegger did insist that some modest pension reforms be part of the budget deal. But at best, these reforms—requiring increased contributions from many existing public employees and slightly reduced benefits in the defined-benefit pension plans of new state workers, depending on final union negotiations—would shave off $100 billion over the next 30 years. Something more has to be done about pension promises to current workers. But despite Republican legislative pressure for a tougher deal, the budget includes only Schwarzenegger’s limited measures. And state contributions to the pension fund will be rising steeply in coming years, which will put further strain on an already precarious budget.
————————————————-So looks like $100Bn of the $400Bn problem might have been solved!
So is it true or just another smoke and mirrors?
enron_by_the_sea
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enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantI should be able to buy CDS on a fellow player landing in big sh!t
enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantI should be able to buy CDS on a fellow player landing in big sh!t
enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantI should be able to buy CDS on a fellow player landing in big sh!t
enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantI should be able to buy CDS on a fellow player landing in big sh!t
enron_by_the_sea
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enron_by_the_sea
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enron_by_the_sea
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enron_by_the_sea
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enron_by_the_sea
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enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantMy prediction is that this thread will be the free for all thread for next few days.
You can never have any rational discussion of this issue on the internet. period.
enron_by_the_sea
ParticipantMy prediction is that this thread will be the free for all thread for next few days.
You can never have any rational discussion of this issue on the internet. period.
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