Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Sid Salter: PERS Concerns Remain Volatile as Markets Rumble

Across the U.S., public pension unfunded liabilities generally decreased, falling about 9 percent from $1.62 trillion in 2024 to $1.48 trillion in 2025. That’s the good news. The unwelcome news is that a recession or other severe economic downturn could raise state and local public pension debt to as much as $2.74 trillion by 2026. Mississippi’s Public Employees Retirement System, or PERS, has an unfunded liability of roughly $26 billion. PERS is the public pension defined-benefit system that provides retirement benefits to some 360,000 current and former public employees in the state, including elementary and secondary school teachers and administrators, university and community college faculty, staff and administrators, and other state employees.

There are 145,836 active PERS members (workers still employed). As of the last report, the average PERS pension benefit $27,541 per year. According to the National Institute on Retirement Security, 28% of those funds came from employer contributions, 17% from employee contributions, and 55% from investment earnings.

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The PERS policy debate confronting government at all levels in Mississippi isn’t new. It was during the “Great Recession” that then-Gov. Haley Barbour and then-Treasurer Tate Reeves first publicly raised concerns about PERS in the wake of a critical study citing unfunded liabilities. Still, state legislators ignored discussions of PERS reform. Barbour and Reeves pointed out that the Mississippi Legislature raised state employee retirement benefits without providing a funding mechanism.

There was a reason legislators have historically balked at PERS discussions. Lawmakers didn’t want the increased scrutiny that any discussion of PERS reform would have on the Legislature’s enhanced retirement benefits. Since 1989, Mississippi’s 174 legislators and the lieutenant governor have enjoyed a preferential state retirement system that is 1.5 times more generous than that provided to “regular” state employees such as schoolteachers or highway workers. Lawmakers are eligible for two pensions that, on average, can add up to 165 percent of their salaries.

The special legislative system – called the Supplemental Legislative Retirement Plan (SLRP) – allowed legislators to pay into the Public Employees’ Retirement System (PERS) at a rate 50 percent higher than for regular employees.

How serious is the Legislature about public pension reforms? Legislators adopted House Bill 1 last session, which terminated the Supplemental Legislative Retirement Plan (SLRP) for employees hired after July 1, 2025. That move signaled the Legislature’s resolve to bolster the state’s pension system for all workers.

Just as existing state employees saw their PERS system benefits left untouched by the change of law, state legislators saw their system untouched. But beginning July, lawmakers and state employees alike will be subject to the new Tier 5 structure in PERS.

As communicated to state employees by PERS Executive Director Ray Higgins last year, “House Bill 1 was recently signed into law. This bill contained several provisions, some of which pertained to the Public Employees’ Retirement System of Mississippi (PERS). The bill included what is commonly referred to as Tier 5, which means a new benefit structure for future employees.

“This bill made no changes to the benefits of current members or retirees of PERS and should help by better sustaining the system long term and supporting their promised benefits. The new benefit provisions apply only to PERS-covered employees hired on or after March 1, 2026. The Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol Retirement System was not included in the bill.

“The bill also contained modifications to the Optional Retirement Plan (ORP), which only affects Institutions of Higher Learning, and closed the Supplemental Legislative Retirement Plan (SLRP). The closing of SLRP means that all newly elected members of the State Legislature and the President of the Senate (Lieutenant Governor) elected after March 1, 2026, will no longer be eligible for membership in SLRP and will only be members of the new PERS Tier 5,” Higgins wrote.

As with most public pensions, concerns remain that Mississippi lawmakers took bold steps in 2025 to address structural issues in PERS.

Still, as Dan Doonan, executive director of the National Institute on Retirement Security, wrote in Forbes in November: “A growing body of research indicates that many Americans will not be able to sustain their standard of living once they leave the workforce.”

Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

Tier 5 will destroy the public workforce, which I think was intended. However, it will also cause the unfunded liability to skyrocket with less and less people paying in for all the folks currently drawing retirement. Pull the ladder up behind you and toss some gas and a match while you’re at it. No need to try to actually come up with a solution, just burn it down while you get yours.

Anonymous said...

@8:38
You literally described the boomer playbook.
Don’t forget to add “reverse mortgage everything so your creditors take their inheritance”

Anonymous said...

The unfunded liability is the difference between the value of PERS's investments and the present value of all future PERS liabilities without taking into consideration any future employee or employer contributions or future investment earnings. It's the same as a person taking the money and investments they currently have and comparing it to the present value of all of their current loans, credit cards, etc. and saying the person is in financial trouble if the money on hand is less than the future value of all of their debts.

Anonymous said...

I can't believe I'm going to say this, but the only person who has said anything to really address the impact the UL will have on the plan *and* the state's bond rating is The Hat. Andy Gibson's article about the need for a major cash infusion was the most serious-about-actually-fixing-the-problem commentary I've seen. I kind of have a hard time believing he wrote it.

Anonymous said...

PERS is supposed to be the retirement account for state employees. It should be managed no differently than your 401K or IRA. You also have to imagine that new employees will start paying in once the retirees retire.
I know Mississippi's best PERS manager and her problem was the mismanagement which took place for decades. She made progress in making sure it became " whole".
Your distrust of government is why you've continued to allow your politicians to " help themselves" and not YOU. See the retirement plans in states that have worked well forever and model those laws!
I know state government retirees in 3 other states that are receiving exactly what was promised and it is the percentage of the salary based on years paid in. If always a government employee, that amounts to at least 3/4 after 20 years. The retirement funds are not at risk and neither should ours be if Pat's successors held firm and our redneck politicians continued to find ways to "loot" the system! Go for smart and honorable and not for " pretty" boys and girls who tell you what you want to believe is true but isn't. Government is complicated and crooks will take advantage of you if you are simple-minded.

Hookah said...

it's called opt out

Anonymous said...

Thats not an option they give us

Anonymous said...

Wait, I thought we were all going to get a basic universal income so I can stop working?

Anonymous said...

HMMM.. Historically lowest paid teachers in America for decades receive an average yearly WHOPPING PERS retirement benefit of $ 27,000 a year . Our state leadership is still concerned that they are getting just too much in retirement. NO WORDS.....

Anonymous said...

Not enough taxpayer capacity to bridge the shortfall. Not without totally gutting everything else including education.

Have Yourself a Merry Little Haircut.

Anonymous said...

Louisiana's pension contributions adjust annually based on performance, and they don't get 3% raises every year.

Our legislature is not serious about fixing PERS.

Anonymous said...

The market might go up, the market might go down. Over the next 50 years, it will go up. That's the perspective to take Sid.

Anonymous said...

None of you people know nothing about nothing! NOTHING!!!


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If you get tired come relax at the Fox News Tent. To gain admittance to the VIP section, bring either your Republican Party ID card or a Rebel Flag. Bringing both will entitle you to free drinks.Get your tickets now. Since this is an event for trolls, no ID is required, just bring the hate. Bring the family, Trollfest '07 is for EVERYONE!!!

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