Great Recession

Private and public sectors trade pension plans for real retirement security

08/06/2014
Over the last three decades, private-sector companies have transitioned away from traditional pension plans and toward 401(k)-style plans for their employees. While the traditional pension plans were unpredictable and unmanageable, these 401(k)-style plans offered companies a greater level of certainty in their budget and gave employees greater control over their retirement accounts. Today, 85 percent...

U.S. workforce grows, Illinois’ shrinks

By Michael Lucci
08/04/2014
U.S. nonfarm payrolls added 208,000 workers in the month of July, against consensus expectations of 230,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The national unemployment rate ticked up to 6.2 percent. However, one of the reasons for the increase is that the number of people in the workforce increased. It is healthy for workforce...

Illinois’ disappearing workforce

By Michael Lucci
07/28/2014
Since the Great Recession began, Illinois’ workforce participation has dropped more than that of any other state in the Midwest. That means that working-age Illinoisans have given up and left the workforce more rapidly than in surrounding states. A full 3.9 percent of Illinois’ adult population has quit the workforce since January 2008. The state’s...

Another state credit downgrade highlights need for pension reform

07/23/2014
Pennsylvania is the latest state to receive a Moody’s Investors Service credit downgrade. The drop was largely due to the state’s growing pension crisis. Moody’s issued the following statement with its credit downgrade of Pennsylvania to Aa3 from Aa2: “The downgrade of the general obligation rating to Aa3 reflects the commonwealth’s growing structural imbalance …...

Illinois workforce shrinks by largest margin in state history

By Michael Lucci
07/20/2014
In June, Illinois suffered the largest monthly workforce loss in recorded state history. June’s workforce loss was worse than the worst month of the Great Recession. Overall, 21,700 Illinoisans gave up and left the workforce in June; in September 2008, 17,500 Illinoisans quit the workforce. (Bureau of Labor Statistics data go back to 1976.) This...

End the crony slush fund that is the Ex-Im Bank

By Bryant Jackson-Green
07/14/2014
An important debate about the future of the Export-Import Bank of the United States is raging in Congress and in the media. The House Financial Services Committee held a hearing last month to ask if the bank was “corporate necessity or corporate welfare?” The Ex-Im Bank originated as a New Deal-era program, financing loans to...

Real, reasonable pension reform: 401(k)-style plans for new state workers

By John Klingner
07/09/2014
The recent Illinois Supreme Court ruling on state retiree health insurance benefits creates a major problem for both the state and local governments. The court ruled that retiree health insurance benefits are protected by the pension protection clause of the Illinois Constitution. The ruling will make it difficult to reform retiree health benefits and to...

Illinois’ jobs report card

By Michael Lucci
06/30/2014
It’s report-card season in Illinois, as the journey and efforts that began last August have come to fruition for students across the state. State governments can be graded too, in particular on the subject of jobs. How Illinois fares on job creation is critically important for local high school and college seniors, who have just...

A tale of two governors: Wisconsin vs. Illinois

By Michael Lucci
06/16/2014
In January 2011, the governors of Wisconsin and Illinois took office for their first elected terms. They set their states on two very different paths: one that led to recovery, and one that led to further decline. Gov. Pat Quinn saw a hole in pension funding, so he raised income taxes on all Illinoisans by...

The nation’s 7 million “jobs gap”

By John Klingner
06/06/2014
The nation’s unemployment rate remained at 6.3 percent in May, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ latest unemployment report. But with 217,000 jobs created, the total number of payroll jobs has finally recovered to its pre-recession level. In other words, the nation is finally back to where it was six years ago. While...