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A Retirement System For Texas

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Born in the Great Depression. World War II interrupted trend. Postwar. Prosperity ... Recent trends: TMRS. Costs controllable by city choice ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Retirement System For Texas


1
A Retirement System For Texas
TMRS
2
Texas Government
  • Local Control
  • Limited Central Authority

3
Public Retirement SystemsBorn in the Great
Depression
  • Social Security1935
  • Texas Teacher Retirement System1937

World War II interrupted trend
4
Postwar Prosperity
and planningfor the future
City of Dallas Employees---1944Employees
Retirement System of Texas---------------1947Te
xas Municipal Retirement System-----------1948

5
TMRS
  • Emphasized local control
  • Reflected emphasis on planning

6
The Early Years
TMRS
Gaynor Kendall
Dean Gorham
Nine cities in the first year
7
grew one cityat a time
TMRS
  • Over 100 cities by 1958
  • Most growth from 1970 to 1991
  • 811 today

8
How TMRS Works
Hybrid systemMoney purchase plan with Defined
Benefit features

9
Cities choose
  • Employee deposit rate
  • Matching ratio
  • Vesting
  • Retirement eligibility
  • Service credit

10
Updated Service Credit

Plan feature that can be adopted by
cities Protects value of employees benefit
over time
11
Cities Control
  • Benefit structure for employees
  • Cost

12
How are benefits funded?
  • Member deposits
  • City contributions
  • Investment earnings

13
How are costs determined?

Each citys cost is determined independently,
based on its chosen plan.
14
Some costs are set when city joins
  • Deposit rate
  • Prior Service Costs

City is always told costs before joining. Other
costs accrue over time.
15
Why do costs change?

Plan experience, including turnover, retirement
rates, and other factors City changes plan
provisions Sometimes actuarial assumptions
change
16
Annual Actuarial Valuation
  • Actuary examines each city
  • Compares assumptions to experience
  • Sets rate for new year

17
City Rate Letter

Sent each year as early as possible (usually
April) Shows rate for new year, changes in
rate, and reasons for change
18
Actuarial Experience Studies

Performed every five years by TMRS Actuary
examines assumptions and adjusts them When
assumptions change, costs can change too
19
Historically, when actuarial changesincrease
rates, TMRS allows cities to phase in the
increaseover several years.
  • Year 3
  • Year 2
  • Year 1

20
Limiting costs
  • 1948 Law set Maximum Contribution Rate Limits
  • When rate is at limit
  • City cannot incur further liability
  • No benefit increases, COLAs, or USC


21
Limits tied to Citys Deposit Rate and Match
22
Cities can increase Max or waive it.Cities
joining since 1996 not subject to limits


23
Issues for small cities
Volatility from experience Example With
three employees, one unplanned retirement can
dramatically affect the rate

24
Actuarial adjustmentsfor small cities
Turnover assumptions Conservative amortization
schedule

25
Funding Benefits
TMRS invests in bonds Investments match plan
design Predictable income stream

26
TMRS
2005
27
National Pension Debate
Recent trends

Public policy less protective of
workers Concern over uncontrolled pension
costs Mistrust of government solutions
28
TMRS

Costs controllable by city choice Less sensitive
to markets than Defined Benefit plans Still
emphasizes local choice
29
What about the future?

Lower interest rates, but Rates should rise
when economy changes Mortality table
adjustments for longer lives, but Longer
expected careers
30
TMRS
Made in Texas in 1948 and built to last!
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