New Study Analyzes Teacher Pension Plans in Six States
Data Reveal Pensions Have Important Retention Impact, Provide Substantially Greater Retirement Security than 401(k)-Style Accounts
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These findings are featured in new research, Teacher Pensions vs. 401(k)s in Six States:
Download the report here. Register for the webinar here.
“In the six states analyzed, we find that pensions are significantly better matched to a teacher’s career than 401(k) accounts and that switching away from pensions would sharply reduce the retirement security of education professionals,” says report co-author
The study analyzes teacher turnover patterns and projects the final tenure for the current teaching workforce using retirement system actuarial assumptions. Then, the study compares benefits for current teachers under the existing pension and a hypothetical 401(k) account with the same contribution rate as the pension. Importantly, the analysis was weighted to reflect the real-life teaching workforce in each state.
“The evidence is clear that pensions have a magnetic effect on the education workforce and are the most cost-efficient means of providing teachers with a stable and secure income in retirement,” says
The research finds that:
- Most classroom teaching is performed by long-career teachers who are well-positioned to benefit from a traditional pension. On average in the six states, the typical teacher will serve 25 years in the same state while two out of three educators will teach for at least 20 years.
- For eight out of ten teachers in the six states analyzed, pensions provide higher, more secure retirement income compared to a 401(k)-style plan. An average of 77 percent of teachers will stay long enough in the same retirement system to earn greater, more secure benefits from the lowest-tier pension compared to an idealized 401(k) with low fees and no investment mistakes. Compared to a realistic 401(k) with typical individual investor returns, existing pensions are better for 81 percent of teachers.
- Conversely, only two out of ten teachers in the six states will accrue less benefit under the lowest-tier pension offered by their state, compared to an idealized 401(k)-style plan. Across the six states, only 23 percent of teachers will not accumulate enough service in the same retirement system to earn pension benefits from the lowest-tier pension that are greater than benefits from an idealized 401(k). Only 19 percent are better off with a realistic 401(k) than with a pension.
- In all six states, most teachers would require substantially higher contributions to realize the same retirement income in a 401(k) as the lowest-tier pension. The magnitude of increased cost varies due to differences in teacher demographics and pension benefit structure. Based on median age at hire and median projected service, it would cost 20 percent more to fund a typical
Georgia teacher's retirement benefit. For those inColorado ,Connecticut , andKentucky , it would cost roughly 40 percent more. InMissouri andTexas , a 401(k) would require twice the pension contributions for a typical teacher.
Given these data findings, the report offers four key implications for any policymakers considering pension reform:
1. As teacher shortages worsen, it is important to consider that pensions exert a clear retention effect on experienced teachers, lowering turnover and contributing to education quality.
2. Shifting from pensions to 401(k)s to other account-based plans will increase turnover and significantly reduce the retirement incomes of long-term teachers who conduct most classroom teaching.
3. Shifting to 401(k)s will decrease the aggregate retirement income of teachers, reducing future consumer spending in the state.
4. States concerned about equity between short- and long-term teachers should consider restoring or augmenting portability provisions in existing pensions, such as service credit purchases, pension system reciprocity, matching employee contribution refunds, and allowing non-vested employees to purchase lifetime income. Colorado PERA stands out as a system that provides attractive benefits to teachers and other public servants regardless of tenure.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190108005337/en/
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