Hynes Speech at City Club
Hynes Speech at City Club
Hynes Speech at City Club
Dan Hynes
City Club
Feb. 14, 2019
Digging Out of Illinois’ Fiscal Mess: Ideas and Solutions
Remarks as Prepared for Delivery
It’s great to be here again.
It’s hard to believe but the last time I spoke here was in January 2010 – nearly a decade ago – and I
believe that many of you were in the room then.
I would also like the record to reflect that when I came here a decade ago, I took that opportunity to
make a joke about Donald Trump’s hair.
Most importantly, in my speech I said that sometimes it’s by looking back that we become certain of
what we must do – and where we must go – together. And today, I’d like to take my time to look a little
bit into what’s behind us -‐-‐ so that we can see clearly the path ahead of us.
…
When I stood here as a young man in 2010, the state’s financial situation was challenging – to say the
least. The budget was straining with red ink, the backlog was hitting $6 billion and we had painful
choices to make.
I had been sounding the alarm about budget gimmicks and overly-‐rosy financial pictures -‐-‐ as well as
efforts to mislead the voters and promise them things that we couldn’t afford. Sometimes my warnings
worked -‐-‐ sometimes they landed with a thud. Sometimes the state made progress -‐-‐ sometimes we fell
backward into a mess of our own making.
Even by Illinois standards, though, the past four years have taken an extraordinary toll. I will be the first
to say that we had problems before Governor Rauner’s impasse began -‐-‐ and there was plenty of blame
to go around. But the situation that we find ourselves in today is an entirely different beast. It will take
years to dig out of the self-‐inflicted financial hole made worse by an unnecessary two year ideological
war.
The catalogue of horribles is dire:
• A 3.2 billion dollar structural budget deficit, even after raising taxes.
• A mountain of debt that totals nearly 15 billion dollars. That’s triple what we owed when the
impasse began.
• Late Payment Interest Penalties due to the budget impasse exceeded $1.25 billion.
• Eight credit downgrades for the state, and 5 universities fell to junk credit status.
• We now pay millions more in interest on our lower-‐rated bonds – enough money to give
another 25,000 students MAP grants every year. That’s enough to provide scholarships to every
undergrad at SUI-‐Carbondale and Illinois State – combined.
It’s devastating. And most of it was avoidable.
1
Next week, our new Governor will lay out a budget blueprint to address these issues and deal with them
head on. I am proud to be working for Governor JB Pritzker and the strong team he has assembled.
And today, I want to talk with you about how Governor Pritzker’s administration will address a financial
challenge that has bedeviled generations of Illinoisans -‐-‐ our pensions.
Today the State of Illinois faces nearly 134 billion dollars in unfunded pension liabilities.
Let’s start with this critical point: These are pensions that workers earned – workers who served as
teachers, as janitorial staff, as laborers, as nurses. These are pensions that were promised to them -‐-‐ and
these workers have planned around and relied upon them for their retirement.
But these pensions were never supposed to eat up 20 percent of our budget.
As I said in my opening, sometimes you need to look back to find out the best path forward.
The year was 1994, and our government leaders realized there was a problem. The state’s pension
systems were headed on a financial collision course with actuarial and mathematical reality. Experts
were convened -‐-‐ plans devised -‐-‐ and it was decided: The State would embark on a 50 year plan to
pension solvency.
This plan was well-‐intentioned, no doubt. And at first, it seemed to work – the systems were 70 percent
funded in 1997.
But there were hidden flaws, and unanticipated hiccups.
The flaws only became evident when markets got shaky and we realized that people were going to be
living longer.
First, the payments were backloaded. They would steadily increase, but the real pain was left for the
out-‐years.
Then, system assets dropped by 10% during the dot-‐com crash and by 31% during the Great Recession.
Only then did the systems realize that their projected rates of return were unreasonably high.
But the plan, the actuaries and the markets were only responsible for some of our dilemma. We also
have to acknowledge the politically motivated, poor judgments that led to pension holidays, early
retirement initiatives and skimming off the top of pension bonds.
It all added up to this:
The original architects of this 25-‐year old plan calculated that in 2020, Illinois taxpayers would pay only
$4.9 billion for pensions. Instead, the plan now requires us to pay $9.1 billion. That’s nearly double what
was expected.
In 1996, the state spent 3 percent of its General Funds revenues on pensions. Today, the plan calls for
us to spend 21 percent of our revenues on pensions.
2
Let that sink in. 3 percent. 21 percent.
It’s unsustainable. . . . and frankly it is not fair. It is not fair to parents – today -‐-‐ who need child care and
students who deserve a good education. It is not fair to those who rely on social services -‐-‐ or to
providers who wait months to get paid for delivering them.
This state has tried to keep up with this 1995 payment ramp -‐-‐ and legislators have taken many difficult
votes to do so. Votes to raise taxes -‐-‐ votes to cut benefits. And in that time, the Supreme Court has
ruled that a pension is a promise. An unbreakable promise that we are legally required to pay.
But it just seems that when it comes to reducing our pension liability, for every two steps we go
forward, we take three steps back.
Remember, we were 70% funded in 1997. Yet, for all the taxpayer dollars we poured into state pension
funds over the last 20 years, we’re now only 40 percent funded. That’s 30 percentage points LOWER
than just after this ramp began.
It is truly like the Greek myth of Sisyphus pushing that pension boulder uphill, only to have it slip back
down each time he makes progress.
Whether it was a flawed structure of our pension ramp -‐-‐ or the intervention of politicians who couldn’t
help but to give away the store -‐-‐ our reality today is shaped by the fact that one out of every five dollars
in our state budget goes to a pension.
…
Despite all this bad news, there is a path forward -‐-‐ and it involves first being honest and transparent
with ourselves and the taxpayers.
That starts with the vital need to finally enact a fair income tax that will generate significant additional
revenue for this state. A fair tax that 33 other states have already put in place. A fair tax that is the
income tax system for the United States government. A fair income tax that raises taxes on people like. .
. . well like my boss . . . and gives the vast majority of the people of Illinois a tax break.
The fair income tax will change the arc of this state’s finances in a very positive way -‐-‐ forever.
It will take political will, but the Governor and our entire administration is committed to doing the right
thing. What we won’t do is balance the budget on the backs of working families. They’ve paid that price
for too long.
We’re proposing a way forward that acknowledges reality. The reality is that we must and will pay the
pensions that are owed. The reality is that a fair income tax can be enacted in less than two years. The
reality is that no state can thrive when one out of every five dollars goes to pensions. The reality is that
we cannot crowd out all the investments we need to grow our economy and enhance our children’s
future.
Let me offer some ideas and solutions to dig out of our mess.
3
First, when the fair tax becomes law, we will create a new revenue source dedicated specifically to
pensions. The state will commit to using $200 million a year directly to pensions, over and above our
legally required payments. This will not only help pay down the unfunded liability but will likely also
lower the cost of our debt.
Second, we must infuse cash and assets into the system now to improve the health of the funds. We will
be evaluating some of the assets that are owned by the State – they could be worth tens of billions of
dollars – for potential transfer into the pension funds. I am pleased that experts like Jackie Avitia-‐
Guzman and Jamie Star have signed on to help with these evaluations. These assets could be used in a
way that is far more financially responsible for the state, to increase assets in the pension systems to
offset liabilities and reduce the unfunded liability overall.
Third, let’s listen to experts and exercise good financial management. We can lower the cost of our
pension debt and inject cash immediately into the system by issuing a small-‐scale pension bond of about
$2 billion. The bond proceeds would be used for no purpose other than to be deposited directly into the
funds -‐-‐ and would be used only for paying down our more expensive pension liabilities. No skimming off
the top to pay this year’s pension payment. No using bond proceeds to pay for operating costs.
This protects taxpayers from the way these bonds were misused in the past, and it brings our pension
funds closer to a healthy level. We would look to move forward with this bond only if the calculation
makes sense for taxpayers -‐-‐ and if the interest rates are lower for the bond than what we are currently
paying for the pension debt. It’s simply good financial management.
Fourth, the optional pension buyout programs passed in last year’s budget were short term in nature -‐-‐
which limits their effectiveness at reducing our future pension liabilities. We intend to extend these
programs to provide certainty to retiring employees who may choose the option to receive more
retirement income upfront. By doing so, we can expand the savings to the state overall. This is a
responsible way to reduce liabilities without going back on the state’s promised retirement benefits.
Finally, during last year’s campaign Governor Pritzker proposed smoothing and flattening payments into
the pension system in the context of contributing more cash and assets to the system. We propose a
modest extension of our pension amortization schedule by seven years. We will still reach the target
goal of 90% funding, but we will do so without massively crowding out investments our state needs to
grow its economy. After almost a quarter century of losing ground, a seven-‐year extension is reasonable
in the context of currently contributing billions more to our pensions systems.
Collectively, these five actions will expand our tax revenue base, invest in priorities that will grow our
economy, and we’ll be able to put our pensions on a sustainable path that keeps our promises to
retirees.
Now, no discussion of pensions would be complete without recognition that we have a pension crisis
brewing among our local and county governments. We must explore smart ways to consolidate those
pension funds. The state is home to 671 separate public pension funds. This results in a fractured system
that often duplicates functions across funds, limits the smaller funds to a narrow range of lower return
investments, and impedes their ability to negotiate lower fees.
4
These funds manage $170 billion in assets and have accrued liabilities totaling more than $355 billion.
These liabilities have placed increased pressure on local governments and the State of Illinois, driving up
property taxes and crowding out funding for critical local public services.
To begin consolidation efforts, Governor Pritzker created the Pension Consolidation Feasibility Taskforce
which will be co-‐chaired by William Brodsky, the former Chairman and CEO of the Chicago Board
Options Exchange, Pat Devaney, the President of the Associated Fire Fighters of Illinois and Christine
Radogno, the former Illinois Senate Minority Leader.
…
No solution to Illinois’ pension crisis will be easy – every person in this room and every person outside
this room knows that. If we’re honest with ourselves, each choice involves sacrifice; each path involves
pain.
What I do know is this: We can’t be the state we want to become if we vacuum up more and more of
every tax dollar into pensions. We have to be able to invest in the things that will feed growth: strong
schools, reliable infrastructure, a robust network of human services, effective public safety.
But, if we are willing to look back and understand our mistakes, we become certain of what we must do
– and where we must go – together – to be the state that we want to be – and that I know we can
become.
###
5