LadyKate wrote:
How the heck do you underfund pensions by 500 billion dollars anyway?
Pensions are, at their most basic, a retirement plan in which the enrollees are guaranteed benefits at a certain dollar amount, or an amount adjusted for inflation against some index or what have you. The point is, guaranteed monthly (or yearly, or whatever the pay schedule is) benefits.
The first way is a model where the money you put in when you're working goes into a pension fund that then gets invested in various investment mechanisms. Bonds, stocks, mutual funds, other derivatives, etc. So everybody's money gets pooled to make up one big investment chunk, and then you also draw off money to pay the people who are retired.
You get underfunding when you've guaranteed more money (or, depending on the legislation, perhaps "too much" more money, I'm not exactly sure how the accounting works) than you have. This can happen for a number of reasons: 1) your retirees, as a whole, start living longer than you expected them to when you decided how much money you would guarantee they'd get, 2) your inflation adjustments increase too fast, 3) your investments aren't performing as well as you had projected when you decided how much money you would guarantee they'd get, or 4) you actually lose a bunch of money in the process of investing (which is really just an extreme case of 3).
Essentially, all 4 of those are ways in which either your fund gets smaller than you expected it to be (either because it's actually shrinking when you lose money, or because it's not growing as fast as you thought it would), or you end up having to pay more than you thought you would (because people are living longer and thus you're paying more retirees each year as fewer die than new people retire, or because you're paying bigger amounts to the ones you've got).
edit: Bah, serves me right for getting sidetracked. =P
LadyKate wrote:
Is there still a possibility of things turning around and that money being gained back?
It sounds like renegotiating contracts is their only option but thats not fair to everyone who put all that money in.
1. It depends on how quickly the market rebounds (but that's not necessarily a good thing -- it would just mean another bubble was developing) and how many people they're actually paying out to now.
2. "Fair" is something that liberals have been trying to put into the investment world for ages, and just won't work, because risk is already fair. The problem arises when you try to guarantee things and fool people into thinking that risky things are safe. Pensions are a huge example of selling investment as safe, when it's not really. It's low risk, but the risk is still there.
Now, that said, good luck selling that line to the public. Our society wants to believe in safety, even if it means hurting everybody around us (including ourselves) to maintain that illusion. That's what bailouts are about.