The Economic Impact of Colorado PERA

The National Institute of Retirement Security (NIRS) recently released a report, Pensionomics, highlighting the economic impact of pension plans across the country.

Distributions from pension plans like Colorado PERA create substantial economic benefits in local communities where retirees live. NIRS created state-specific fact sheets that detail the economic impact of retirement distributions in each state. The Colorado fact sheet includes the impact of all retirement distributions in the state, but the bulk of retirement distributions made in Colorado are those made to PERA retirees.

As the study authors note, “Because pensions supply secure income to retirees, pensions provide local economies with stable sources of revenue.”

Nationwide, the NIRS study found that over $943 billion in total economic output resulted from spending coming from defined benefit pension plans in 2012. Those same expenditures also supported 6.2 million American jobs that paid $306.9 billion in income in that year. Also in 2012, the benefits that defined benefit pension plans paid out supported $135.1 billion in tax revenue at the local, state, and federal levels.

As they do across the country, retirees in Colorado spend their pension benefit distributions on everything from food and entertainment to health care, housing, transportation and even taxes. That spending creates a ripple effect in local economies, sustaining local businesses and supporting employment.

And reliable income from plans like PERA can be especially important during economic downturns. Retirees who know they will receive a steady check despite economic conditions will spend that regular income, helping to stabilize the economy more broadly.

Local economists at Pacey Economics worked with PERA to research the economic and fiscal impacts of spending by PERA retirees across Colorado. What they found is that PERA is one of Colorado’s best investments.

  • PERA provides $3.35 billion in annual benefit distributions to Colorado residents – distributions that are prefunded, by both employee and employer contributions, and invested while a member is working.
  • Annual benefit distributions to Colorado residents result in $4.78 billion in total output, of which more than $2.0 billion is value added above the benefit distributions, or newly created goods and services that result.
  • This economic impact contributes to $1.12 billion in labor income, helping to sustain nearly 26,000 jobs in Colorado.
  • Benefit distributions also help produce more than $280 million in state and local tax revenue.

When households receive PERA benefit distributions, those dollars are spent in local economies across the state, creating a chain reaction. The impact of a dollar spent has a ripple effect across the economy, so that one retiree’s spending becomes someone else’s income.

In addition to measuring the impact of its distributions throughout Colorado, PERA looked in more detail at the economic impact in nine different regions across the state:

The reliable distributions that go to retirees in Colorado from PERA and similar pension funds have an impact far beyond PERA’s more than 500,000 members. From local restaurants to doctors and hospitals, small businesses and Colorado communities see a direct benefit from retired public workers who have contributed to Colorado throughout their careers and continue to do so in retirement.

Colorado PERA Receives Another Clean Financial Audit

For the third year in a row, auditors found no significant deficiencies or material weaknesses in PERA’s financial reporting or controls. Each year, independent auditors hired by the Office of the State Auditor conduct a review of PERA’s financial status and fiscal controls, reporting the results to the Legislative Audit Committee (LAC) of the Colorado General Assembly.

The 2013 audit, presented on August 26 to the LAC, was conducted by KPMG and overseen by the State Auditor’s Office.

Colorado PERA is committed to transparency in everything we do and that’s especially true in communicating the financial status of the plan to our membership, our employers, elected officials, the media, and taxpayers.

PERA’s Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, which includes audited financial statements, has served as the model for the industry and has won the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting from the Government Finance Officer’s Association (GFOA) for 28 consecutive years. The Summary Annual Financial Report, which is mailed to all members and retirees, has received this recognition for 11 consecutive years. The Summary Annual Financial Report contains easy to read information about PERA’s investments, funded status, and the economic impact of paying $3.35 billion in retirement distributions to retirees who call Colorado home.

For more information on the economic impact of Colorado PERA on the state’s economy, please see this previous PERA on the Issues post: The Economic Impact of Colorado PERA.