White House Proposal Would Increase Employee Pension Contributions by 150 Percent
Tuesday, September 20, 2011(National Federation of Federal Employees)
As part
of its comprehensive plan to reduce the federal
budget issued yesterday, the White House
proposed to increase federal employees’ pension
contributions. The proposal seeks to increase
worker-financed contributions by 150 percent
over the next three years.
Federal
workers currently contribute 0.8% of their
paychecks to their pensions every pay period.
Should this proposal become law, workers would
be obligated to pay an additional 1.2% for a
total employee contribution of 2%. Though the
percentage figure may seem small at first
blush, this change would cost federal workers
tens of thousands of dollars over the span of
their careers.
“We
understand that savings need to come from
somewhere, and there are some tough decisions
to be made, but reducing the modest retirement
benefit for VA nurses, federal firefighters,
border patrol officers, and other federal
workers is the wrong approach to doing it,”
said NFFE National President Dougan in a
statement following the plan’s release.
“Federal workers earn every penny they receive
in their retirement, and they should not have
that cornerstone of their retirement security
whittled away.”
Furthermore, the proposed increase in
employee contributions will not result in a
corresponding increase in pension benefits,
meaning that federal workers are simply going
to have to pay more to get the same modest
benefit they now
receive.
“We are
not pleased to see federal workers’ retirement
put on the block for cuts,” said Dougan.
“Federal employees’ pensions are half what they
used to be under the previous retirement
system, and now they are proposing even greater
cuts. It’s just not
right.”
According to data from the National
Active and Retired Federal Employees
Association, the average Federal Employees
Retirement System (FERS) retiree receives just
$12,780 per year in their retirement
annuity. By most objective standards, that
is not a pension one can retire on. It is just
a small fraction of what a retiree needs to
cover living expenses. Nonetheless, the
government seems determined to squeeze more
savings out of the already overburdened federal
workforce.
“Federal
workers are seeing this proposed cut to their
retirement security on top of a two year pay
freeze and almost $1 trillion in cuts to
federal agency budgets over the next ten
years,” said Dougan. “Federal agencies
are going to have to make serious changes to
achieve that level of savings. The attacks
on the federal workforce are coming from all
angles.”
Continuing:
“The White House is mistaken if they think additional cuts to the federal workforce will not impact the ability of federal agencies to recruit and retain a qualified workforce. Cutting pay and benefits year after year makes a big difference in recruiting. With every cut that’s made, federal jobs cease to be good jobs. One decision at a time, the federal government is losing its reputation for being a good employer.”
