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12/3/2012



Jonathan Ingram
Director of Health Policy and Pension Reform








For the second year in a row, the state’s annual pension payment will increase by nearly $1 billion. The combined payment for all five state pension systems will increase to $6.8 billion next year, up from $5.9 billion this year.

Annual payments for Illinois’ five pension systems per year, in millions


Illinois ended fiscal year 2012 with an unfunded pension liability of $95 billion. Under new pension accounting rules, the state’s pension debt will grow to more than $209 billion.

Illinois’ pension systems are broke and could soon be insolvent. None of the systems have enough assets on hand to pay benefits to those who have already retired, let alone those still working. Only major reforms, like those centered on defined-contribution plans and those tackling the automatic cost-of-living adjustment, can get the problem under control.

Without these reforms, pensions will continue to crowd out funding for core government services and the systems will run out of money, meaning public workers could see their future pension checks disappear altogether.

The longer state lawmakers delay action, the worse the pension debt crisis will become. Gov. Pat Quinn and legislators must make the tough choices necessary to get the state’s fiscal house in order instead of pinning their hopes on a possible federal bailout.

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