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Long odds for major Illinois pension fix

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"If you don't improve things fairly soon, you reach a sort of ... black hole, and when you get too close to the black hole at some point you will never escape," said Jeremy Gold, an independent consulting actuary who is on the board of the Society of Actuaries. "You can reach a point of no return, where they can't afford to be funded."

Here's a look at the pension system mess and some of the proposals to clean it up:

State and city money gap

Most pension experts say a key step in fixing an underfunded retirement system is to stop digging the hole deeper. That means not adding pension benefit sweeteners that will cost even more. It also means paying enough money each year to ensure that retirement promises are adequately funded.

That amount is known as the annually required contribution, or ARC. The acronym might seem arcane, but at its core are two basic components.

The first part, called the "normal cost," is like the balance on a credit card. It's the estimated amount of money needed to cover the pension costs current employees accrue in a given year — similar to the actual price of all those goods you might rack up on your credit card.

But just as with a credit card, costs balloon if you don't pay the balance off in full when it is due. And that's the situation most Illinois pension systems are in today, struggling to play catch-up on the second part of the ARC, the so-called unfunded liabilities that have grown dramatically. Since 2000, the debt for the five statewide pension plans has increased sixfold.

"Any time you don't pay the ARC, you are just increasing costs and pushing them off to future taxpayers," said Keith Brainard, research director for the National Association of State Retirement Administrators.

The ARC's importance can be seen by looking at the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund, the only major healthy public pension plan in the state. It's also the only fund that has a law requiring cities and towns to pay the ARC every year. If they don't, the fund can unilaterally divert tax revenues to pay it.

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