Toledo Blade
April 27, 2025
STRS: Do more
Reform board members of the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio used their 6-4 majority to make a small increase in the cost-of-living-adjustment for beneficiaries, and it has sparked yet another big debate over management of the $95 billion fund.
Raising COLA from 1 to 1.5 percent and cutting full retirement from 33 years to 32 years will cost the fund $1.84 billion, and opposing board members argued it was “imprudent” because of market volatility. Each year STRS pays $4 billion more in benefits than it takes in from active teachers, so market returns are crucially important to the fund. (My Comment: " possible Market Volatility always exists and can be used as an excuse to not grant any benefit year in and year out")
Teachers, like police, firefighters, and state and local government employees are trying to win passage of legislation raising the payments to Ohio public pensions by taxpayers.
Some lawmakers are advocating legislation to eliminate elected members on Ohio pension boards.
Sadly, no one in Ohio government has acted upon the high fund-management fees and inadequate financial performance at STRS, detailed by institutional investment management pioneer Richard Ennis in The Blade more than two years ago.
“The STRS fund underperformed a passively investable benchmark by 1.62 percentage points per year for the 13 years,” Mr. Ennis wrote. “An opportunity cost of that magnitude on a portfolio averaging, say, $60 billion in value over time, adds up to nearly $12.5 billion,” he concluded.
The reform board members at STRS have done much better at keeping their promise to restore COLA and cut service requirements for full retirement than they have at moving the investment portfolio to lower cost but better performing market index funds.
Lawmakers looking at Ohio pension reform have been even worse.
The lion’s share of legislative discussion has focused on bills forcing
taxpayers to bail out the pensions rather than making sure the pensions perform better.
Even the STRS reform board members and the tens of thousands of activist Ohio teachers who support their mission want more money for the pension from taxpayers without changing investment strategy.
No Ohio pension deserves a dime more from taxpayers until they have reconfigured their investment portfolio to deliver the highest return at the lowest cost.
Years of study on STRS performance by a world-known financial expert tells board members, state lawmakers, and Ohio taxpayers where to start on a solution to the state pension problem.
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