Gas Prices

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 5 December 2013

Pensions and Bankruptcy: a fix is available and should be enacted by Congress

Posted on 06:30 by Unknown

  - by New Deal democrat

Yesterday a bankruptcy judge decided that, Michigan's Constitution notwithstanding, the city of Detroit could be admitted into bankruptcy and its pensions attacked.

As an initial matter, the decision is probably correct as far as it goes, i.e., Federal laws are supreme over state laws, so US bankruptcy law trumps Michigan's Constitution.  Where I have a real problem is that Michigan, at its most fundamental level, sought to make it ultra vires (outside of their lawful powers) for any actor to file for municipal bankruptcy in that State.  You an I can't simply march into US bankruptcy court and put General Electric into bankruptcy.  We have to have the lawful right to make the filing.  Michigan said that nobody had the right to make a lawful filing as to its municipalities.  In my opinion, that should have been enforced against the State-appointed city manager who made the filing.

But there is a deeper problem, and that is the cavalier attitude towards pensions that has been allowed to exist in US bankruptcy courts for 25 years.  If you haven't seen it yet, watch the interview with the elderly, retired Detroit municipal worker who worked for his pension for 40 years and now faces having his retirement income severely cut (and remember that many of these workers do not qualify for Social Security).  He asked, "What do they expect me to do now?"

Since pensions were allowed to be cut in bankruptcies, Congress - including Democrats - has simply shrugged and said, "Too bad."  That doesn't have to be the case, and it shouldn't be the case.

In many cases in private industry, corporate raiders attack a well-functioning company sitting on a pile of cash, including its pension funding.  After the corporate treasury is raided, the company files for bankruptcy and the pensions are cut or even entirely negated.

There is simply no justifiable reason for this rule.  Pension liabilities are publicly known and quantifiable.  In many cases the contractual benefits were earned years, and maybe decades, before.  All subsequent contractual liabilities are made (and should be deemed made) with full knowledge of those pre-existing liabilities to employees.  If there is a bankruptcy, nobody who became a creditor after the vesting of the pension benefits should be allowed to participate in any distribution until those prior contracts are honored.

This doesn't mean that pensions are sacrosanct.  It simply means that creditors who obtain their rights under subsequent contracts have to stand in line behind pensioners who earned their rights in previous contracts.   In the case of Detroit, it means that somebody who bought a bond issued by Detroit 5 years ago shouldn't get paid until that retired worker's pension previously earned benefits are honored in full.

There are public entities, and corporations as well, that promised too much in pensions.   Further, in the case of a necessarily ongoing entity like a municipality, pensions can't be honored in full at the expense of providing necessary municipal services to current residents.  But there is simply no reason to put recent bondholders on the same footing as, let alone ahead of line as, pre-existing pensioners.

Under the rule I am discussing here, if I am a potential new bondholder for a city or company that has huge pension liability, I am either not going to buy their bonds, or else I am going to demand a very high interest rate to hedge against the likelihood that the bond issuer is  going to default. The net effect is that profligate municipalities will go into bankruptcy sooner, when their finances are in less dire straits - which is a good thing.

In short, there is a federal legislative fix for this problem.  It ought to be on the Democrats' agenda, and applicable prospectively to any contracts entered into subsequent to its enactment.

In the meantime, the last several decades have taught workers a brutal lesson:  never trust assurances of future payment.   I want the retirement funding up front, hived off in a defined contribution account that belongs to me, not my employer.


Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • A rare stock market forecast for 2014
      - by New Deal democrat I have a new post up  at XE.com , commenting on recent speculation about a stock market crash vs. a pullback due to...
  • Median family income continued stagnation in 2012
    - by New Deal democrat Berkeley Professors Saez and Piketty have updated their work on family income in the US through 2012, making use o...
  • A thought for Sunday: an undemocratically elected minority of anarchists
    - by New Deal democrat An old cynical political saw says that, "in a democracy, people get the government they deserve." As it ...
  • Why even debating breaching the debt ceiling is a Big F*g Deal: a nonpartisan note
    - by New Deal democrat Regardless of your politics, you should care very much not just whether or not we actually fail to increase the deb...
  • Initial claims last week ex-California computer glitch ~327,000
    - by New Deal democrat Computer issues in California continue to bedevil the weekly initial jobless claims reports. We can make a good es...
  • Three ways to look at interest rates
    - by New Deal democrat The impact of the Fed's "taper" on longer term bonds has been one of the big events of the last three...
  • Comments Are Off Until DAN KENNEDYS LIFESTYLE LIBERATION BLUEPRINT STOPS SPAMMING OUR BLOG
    For the last 24 hours, Dan Kennedy's Lifestyle Liberation Blueprint has been spamming our comments section.  So, until this utterly wo...
  • The Developed World Is Leading the Developing World
    From the Economist:
  • < Sigh > If only there were a way to count people who aren't looking for work, but want a job now. Oh, wait ...
     - by New Deal democrat It's tough to be a Doomer these days.  Almost none of the data is cooperating.  But at least one crutch they can...
  • SPYs Are Remarkably Well-Behaved Considering the Political Backdrop
    Above is a 15 minute chart of the SPYs, which covers the last six trading days.  What's really interesting is how remarkably calm the pr...

Categories

  • Australia
  • Auto
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • Chile
  • China
  • CPI
  • employment
  • Europe
  • GDP
  • Germany
  • India
  • Investment
  • ism manufacturing
  • ISM Service
  • Japan
  • Mexico
  • PCE
  • Peru
  • PPI
  • UK

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (7)
    • ►  January (7)
  • ▼  2013 (293)
    • ▼  December (54)
      • International Economic Predictions for 2014
      • Marking my forecast for 2013 to market
      • Rethinking the EUR/USD Double Top Thesis
      • The Important economic trends of 2013
      • A thought for 2013: The Progressive Economic Case...
      • Weekly Indicators for December 23-27 at XE.com
      • International Economic Week in Review
      • OH NOES!!! So far in the year of Obamacare implem...
      • Year-end posting
      • An updated look at the real personal savings rate
      • Chinese Debt Levels Reaching Concerning Levels
      • Santa had a very rough night ...
      • Double Top For EUR/USD? [Link Fixed]
      • One graph shows why the present stinks (and why th...
      • The Long-Term Pound/Yen Chart is Very Bullish
      • Weekly Indicators for December 16-20 at XE.com
      • International Week In Review: Let the Tapering Begin
      • Weekend Weimar and Beagle
      • Yesterday's poor initial jobless claims report: so...
      • Interest rates' effect on housing in 2014
      • What Will Be the Biggest International Economic St...
      • Latest UK Employment News is Pound Bullish
      • Subdued inflation takes average wages to near 3 ye...
      • The Big International Economic Events of 2013
      • Industrial production now higher than before reces...
      • France Holding Back EU Recovery
      • An NDD holiday special: semi-healthy pecan pie ...
      • International Week in Review: China Still Growing,...
      • Weekly Indicators for December 9-13 at XE.com
      • Unemployment: positive and improving, but not good
      • US Consumers Remarkably Resilient
      • A note about today's initial jobless claims and re...
      • US Dollar Still In An Uptrend Verses the Canadian ...
      • An updated look at the US long leading indicators
      • Pound is Breaking Out Thanks To Strong UK Economic...
      • Oil Rebounds From Recent Lows
      • < Sigh > If only there were a way to count people...
      • Longer Term US Charts Still Bullish
      • A thought for Sunday: Why stagnant wages and trend...
      • Weekly Indicators for December 2-6 at XE.com
      • International Week in Review: Central Bank Holding...
      • On Social Security, "doing nothing" is the best op...
      • November jobs report: a solid positive month (but ...
      • ISM Report Shows Potentially Strong Economy
      • US Employment Is Still Weak
      • Pensions and Bankruptcy: a fix is available and sh...
      • Sorry, Doomers, there really, truly, honestly, STI...
      • French and Italian ETFs Trading Right At Support
      • ISM manufacturing suggests above trend GDP growth,...
      • US Yield Curve Is Widening
      • Potential Housing Bubble Keeps the Reserve Bank of...
      • British Pound is Rallying
      • The anatomy of median wage stagnation: paltry wag...
      • Junk Bond ETF Breaking Out on Daily Chart
    • ►  November (38)
    • ►  October (58)
    • ►  September (79)
    • ►  August (64)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile