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PARS
GASB 45
FAQ/Fact Sheet
What are OPEB benefits?
Why are retiree health costs an issue now?
What is GASB 45?
What is an unfunded liability?
What is required to comply with GASB 45?
How does the retiree healthcare issue relate to pensions?
What are the generational considerations?
What can governments do about retiree health costs?
What has been the private sector experience with retiree health
liabilities?
What are
OPEB benefits?
Besides monthly pension payments, many
California public employees receive health, dental, or other benefits that
are funded in part by their former employer when they retire. These health,
dental, and other benefits are often referred to as "other post-employment
benefits" (OPEB). OPEB benefit packages are not always the same for
different retired public employees. Employees of different governmental
entities (the state, universities, cities, counties, school districts, and
other public entities) often receive different levels of benefits. In some
cases, governments offer no OPEB benefits to their retirees. Retiree health
benefits comprise the largest category of OPEB benefits and thus the term
“retiree healthcare” is often used interchangeably with OPEB.
Why are retiree health costs
an issue now?
Across the country, in both the public and private sectors, employers' costs
for retiree health benefits have been rising rapidly. Two main factors are
attributed to these cost increases. First, healthcare premiums have been
rising at an incredible rate over recent years. Second, the workforce is
aging, as life expectancy is lengthening, increasing the number of retirees
receiving these benefits. In states like California, recent changes in
public pension systems have increased incentives for public employees to
retire earlier, further contributing to an increase in the number of
retirees receiving health benefits.
Historically, nearly all governments have paid
for health benefits for their retired employees on a pay-as-you-go basis
each year. Generally, no funds have been set aside to address future benefit
obligations. For governments, however, when retiree health costs rise faster
than tax revenues, a larger and larger percentage of governmental revenues
must be devoted to providing retiree health benefits. This means that less
money is available to provide services to the public and to pay current
governmental employees.
What is GASB 45?
The Governmental Accounting Standards Board
(GASB) is a non-profit entity that sets accounting standards for state and
local governments in the United States. GASB is similar to the
professional boards that set accounting standards for private sector
entities and the federal government.
Under GASB 45, at some point during the next few
years, governmental entities
will be required to release financial statements that include an actuarial
valuation of unfunded retiree health liabilities. The GASB Statement 45 is an accounting standard, not a legal
requirement for governments to change anything about current public retiree
health benefits or their funding. Nevertheless, under state and local laws,
as well as bond agreements, most governments must release financial
statements that comply with GASB rules, such as GASB 45, each year.
The provisions of GASB Statement 45 took effect
at the start of 2007. Over the next several years, state and local
governments must compile data about their retiree health and similar
benefits and have an actuary calculate the unfunded liabilities that have
accrued to provide those benefits to current and future retirees.
Governments already collect such information for their pension systems.
What is an unfunded
liability? An
unfunded liability exists when a governmental or corporate entity has an
obligation to provide payments or benefits to groups of individuals, but has
set aside no money to fund that obligation. Unfunded liabilities for
retirement systems are estimated by actuaries. Actuaries make assumptions
about a pension system's investment returns, the life expectancy of public
employees, and future public employee salary increases to estimate the
future costs of benefits that have been earned by current and past public
employees. Simply, the unfunded liability is the amount of extra money that
would need to be set aside today and invested by the pension system to cover
the future costs of all promised benefits earned to date by members of that
pension system. Under
GASB 45, for the first time, governments will calculate unfunded retiree
health liabilities. Because most governments have never set aside any funds
to address future retiree health obligations, the unfunded liabilities could
potentially be huge, but will vary greatly from entity to entity, depending
on benefit structures, demographics, and other circumstances unique to each
entity.
What is required to comply
with GASB 45? The
new accounting rule dramatically increases the amount and quality of
information included in government financial reports with respect to retiree
health and other retiree benefits. Local entities, working with their
accountants and actuaries, must take a series of steps that include
quantifying the unfunded liabilities associated with retiree health
benefits. Results of the actuarial valuations must be reported in government
audits and updated regularly. The accounting standard sets deadlines
requiring large governments to comply beginning with release of their
2007-08 financial reports. Smaller governments will implement GASB 45 in the
following two years.
Under GASB 45, government financial statements will list an actuarially
determined amount known as an annual required contribution, or ARC. This
contribution, with regard to health and related benefits, is comprised of
the following two costs:
The normal cost is the amount that needs to be
set aside in order to fund future retiree health benefits earned in the
current year. The unfunded
liability cost is the amount needed to pay off existing unfunded retiree
health liabilities over a period of no longer than 30 years.
How does the retiree
healthcare issue relate to pensions?
Retiree health benefits, like pension benefits,
are a form of deferred compensation, or compensation earned by employees
during their working years, but paid to individuals after they retire.
Pension systems typically are funded by governments paying normal costs each
year, as employees earn this type of deferred compensation, and the funds
are invested so that they generate returns and grow until required to be
paid to the employees after retirement. This is known as “pre-funding,” and
pension accounting standards focus on how well retirement systems are
pre-funded.
To the extent that funds set aside each year
(with assumed, future investment earnings) are insufficient to cover
projected benefit costs, the system has an “unfunded liability.” Retiree
health programs
will now have accounting standards that are very similar. GASB 45 will result in
calculation of an unfunded liability for retiree health programs similar to
the comparable figure for pension systems.
The liabilities for retiree health benefits,
like those for pension systems, will be determined by actuaries and
accountants based on certain assumptions of future health care cost
inflation, retiree mortality, and investment returns. This unfunded
liability can be characterized as an amount which, if invested today, would
be sufficient (with future investment returns) to cover the future costs of
all retiree health benefits already earned by current and past employees.
What are the generational
considerations?
Retiree health benefits, like salaries, are earned during an employee’s
working years. The benefits, however, are paid out after retirement. Unless
enough funds (with assumed, future investment earnings) are set aside to
cover normal costs of benefits while an employee is working, future
taxpayers will pay all or a part of the costs of the employee’s healthcare after
retirement. For
example, take a state employee earning a $25,000 salary in 1985. In addition
to this salary compensation, the employee was promised in 1985 that the
state would pay 100 percent of his or her health benefits during retirement
(if the employee worked at least 20 years). The state, however, did not set
aside any funds for those future health costs in 1985 or in any year
thereafter. If that employee retires this year, taxpayers of today and the
future must pay about $5,000 per year for the employee’s retirement health
costs. While these benefits were earned
by the prior generation
of taxpayers, the current generation of taxpayers will bear the financial
burden of paying for them. In the same way, today’s state workforce is
earning future retirement health benefits. Unless money is set aside for
future costs, the next generation of taxpayers will be left paying this
bill. Because healthcare costs are rising, public employers are offering new
incentives to retire earlier, and retirees are living longer than ever
before, the future costs will be much higher than the current $5,000 per
year. In this way, each generation shifts a growing liability to the next
generation.
What can governments do about
retiree health costs?
Under GASB 45, many governments may report large
unfunded retiree health liabilities. Left unfunded, these liabilities may
continue to result in rapidly growing costs each year and could eventually
impact bond ratings. Over time, addressing the costs of these liabilities
will tend to consume a larger and larger percentage of governmental
revenues. There are
three basic approaches governments can take to address retiree health
liabilities. Governments can either:
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Continue to pay-as-you-go
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Set
aside money in a tax-advantaged trust in order to address part or all of the
future costs of retiree health benefits (i.e. “pre-funding")
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Change
retiree health benefits in some way so as to reduce future costs.
Because of
the sensitive nature of employee benefits, many public entities will face
tough choices in the coming months and years. Eliminating retiree health
liabilities, for example, may require setting aside large amounts of money
or implementing large cuts in benefits for some or all retirees.
What has been the private
sector experience with retiree health liabilities?
The private sector has seen a sharp decline in
retiree health coverage. Since corporations began to account for retiree
health liabilities in 1990 (due to a change in business accounting
standards), investors have pressured them either to fund the liabilities or
drop the benefits altogether. The percentage of large private U.S. firms
offering health benefits to retirees has dropped from about 66 percent in
1988 to about 33 percent in 2005.
Even companies continuing to offer benefits have
cut costs in some cases by: imposing caps on the amount they will pay toward
retiree health care; increasing co-payments, deductibles, and drug costs
paid by retirees; aggressively bargaining with health insurers and
providers; and making many other changes. Companies also may seek bankruptcy
protection to restructure retirement benefits. (Local governments and school
districts also can do this under state law.)
General Motors Corporation (GM), the second
largest purchaser of employer health benefits in the United States, ranks
behind the U.S. government and ahead of CalPERS (the third largest
purchaser). As of September 2004, GM reported in financial statements that
its unfunded retiree health and related liabilities exceeded $61 billion.
Retiree health expenses add significantly to the costs of GM cars and trucks
and are believed to have contributed to a decline in the company’s finances.
Ratings of GM bonds have dropped to junk status, and some have speculated
that a bankruptcy filing may be inevitable.
In October 2005, GM and the United Auto Workers
(UAW) reached agreement to cut retiree health liabilities by $15 billion.
The company agreed to start a new defined contribution health plan to offset
other reductions in the health benefits provided to retired workers. While
UAW’s rank-and-file employees approved the agreement, implementation awaits
a U.S. District Court review of objections from retirees claiming that UAW
lacks the authority to negotiate concessions of retiree health benefits. The
retirees are claiming the benefits are contractual rights.
Have more questions?
For further information you can contact:
Maureen Toal, Vice President - Public Affairs
(800) 540-6369 x 135
mtoal@pars.org.
Contact a PARS consultant today
at:
(800) 540-6369
The information and analysis provided in
this publication is
based upon PARS' understanding of the facts.
Before taking any action based on this information and analysis,
the agency should consult
with its professional advisors.
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