In His Last Budget, Christie Continues to Show What Not to Do With Pensions
Christie gets half-credit for doing more than any of his predecessors, but his efforts reveal just how daunting the state's pension crisis really is.

Gov. Chris Christie will leave office next year, and his final state budget has left a real mess for whoever succeeds him as New Jersey's chief executive.
An analysis by S&P Global Ratings, one of the three major credit ratings agencies, says New Jersey's budget remains "structurally imbalanced" thanks to underfunded state pension systems.
"Christie's fiscal 2018 budget proposal might look fine in the near term, but long term, structural balance remains elusive thanks to the state's continued deferral of full funding for future retirement obligations," wrote David Hitchcock and John Sugden, the two S&P analysts who authored the report. "The picture looks much worse" in future years, they warned, since the current budget relies on a series of short-term fixes.
Those concerns probably sound familiar, because they're almost identical to the reasons given for the 10 credit rating downgrades New Jersey has recieved during Christie's tenure. The most recent downgrade came in November, when S&P cut the state's rating to A-, the fourth lowest grade in their system.
In the new budget plan, Christie has proposed to pay about $2.5 billion into the pension fund during the next fiscal year, which starts on July 1, but that's not enough to satisfy the public retirement system's needs. It's not even close. New Jersey's pension funds are facing a deficit of more than $135 billion, one of the worst shortfalls in the country. Actuaries for the funds say nearly $5 billion in state contributions would be needed next year to break even.
"We have done more for the solvency and stability of the pension system than any governor in history despite all the empty rhetoric to the contrary," Christie said last month during his budget address.
Incredibly, he's right. That's how bad things are in New Jersey.
Bloomberg did the math and determined that Christie has paid more than $8.8 billion into the state pension system since he took over as governor in 2010. That's more than double the total payments made by all New Jersey governors in the 16 years before Christie took over—so give him some credit there—but it's less than half of what the pension system needs on an annual basis to remain solvent, according to the actuaries who make such determinations.
That should give you a sense of both how completely unsustainable New Jersey's (and many other states') pension mess is, and also how long it's been ignored. Christie has paid more than three decades of pension bills in just eight years, and yet he's still only halfway to breaking even.
And who might inherit this fiscal disaster? Possibly Reason buddy Preet Bharara, maybe.
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Dear Reason webfolks: not much point in having comments if you don't allow comments. Today has been especially ridiculously bad.
PS - I totally understand if it's because the Russians are hacking you right now.
Hide yo' kids, hide yo' wife, and hide yo' husband, 'cause they hackin' EVERYBODY out here.
And I said Oh Lord Jesus it's a hack. And I done ran outta there Jesus. And then the Russians got me. I got Windows XP. Ain't nobody got time fo dat.
Disqus! Disqus! Disqus!
No Disqus. Keep it to people who actually sign up to comment only on this site. The glitches and problems are worth the quality of commentary.
Disqus is notoriously glitchy & particular in interacting w browsers.
No Diqus. That is the worst system ever.
*Disqus, but maybe Diqus is more appropriate.
No worries. Next year we'll have a Democrat Governor and s/he will totally fix our finances.
Don't be fatuous, Jeffrey.
A- isn't the forth lowest bond rating by S&P. It is the forth lowest INVESTMENT GRADE rating. There are 15 grades below A-.
He's pulling his weight, you might say, relatively speaking, but not absolutely.
The thing about Christie that I try to explain to people who only started paying attention to politics in the last 5 years is that, no matter how bad he seems, Christie is still the best (or least terrible) governor we've had since the millennium. I don't like the guy, but Corzine should be in prison and the woman he ran against in the second election was a fuckin idiot. In Jersey, we take what we can get.
The Democrat who will probably be our next governor has had TV campaigns for over a year already, and he's basically Corzine 2.0. I'm going to miss Christie.
Yeah, to me, it sounds like he's done as good a job as can be expected given what/who he's dealing with.
The point being that the headline should have been, "In His Last Budget, Christie Continues to Do The Best He Can Against Decades of Democratic Decadence"
Yes. This. He's also had a Dem majority in the NJ congress fighting him the whole time.
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