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Public Employee Pensions and Collective BargainingRights: Evidence from State and Local Government

FinancesBrookings Municipal Finance Conference

Brigham R. Frandsen Michael Webb

BYU

July 18, 2017

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 1 / 21

05

1015

20

2000 2005 2010 2015year

Source: U.S. Courts (2016) Bankruptcy Filings, table F2

Chapter 9 Bankruptcy Filings

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 2 / 21

01,

000

2,00

03,

000

4,00

0

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010year

collective bargaining required by 1996collective bargaining not required by 1996

$ millionsPublic Employee Pension Benefit Payouts

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 3 / 21

050

01,

000

1,50

0

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010year

collective bargaining required by 1996collective bargaining not required by 1996

$ millionsGovernment Contributions to Public Employee Pensions

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 4 / 21

Institutional Background

Before 1950s: public sector collective bargaining prohibited

1961: AFT organized NYC teachers

1962: JFK signs Executive Order 10988

Starting early 1960s: States begin to allow public sector collectivebargaining

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 5 / 21

Institutional Background

Before 1950s: public sector collective bargaining prohibited

1961: AFT organized NYC teachers

1962: JFK signs Executive Order 10988

Starting early 1960s: States begin to allow public sector collectivebargaining

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 5 / 21

Institutional Background

Before 1950s: public sector collective bargaining prohibited

1961: AFT organized NYC teachers

1962: JFK signs Executive Order 10988

Starting early 1960s: States begin to allow public sector collectivebargaining

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 5 / 21

Institutional Background

Before 1950s: public sector collective bargaining prohibited

1961: AFT organized NYC teachers

1962: JFK signs Executive Order 10988

Starting early 1960s: States begin to allow public sector collectivebargaining

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 5 / 21

010

2030

4050

1960 1980 2000 2020year

Number of States RequiringPublic Sector Collective Bargaining

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 6 / 21

Data

Collective bargaining rights status for each state and year (Freemanand Valletta + Frandsen)

State retirement pension payouts and contributions (U.S. CensusAnnual Surveys of State Government Finances)

Employee contributionsGovernment contributionsBenefit payments

State covariates (population growth, employment, etc.)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 7 / 21

Data

Collective bargaining rights status for each state and year (Freemanand Valletta + Frandsen)

State retirement pension payouts and contributions (U.S. CensusAnnual Surveys of State Government Finances)

Employee contributionsGovernment contributionsBenefit payments

State covariates (population growth, employment, etc.)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 7 / 21

Data

Collective bargaining rights status for each state and year (Freemanand Valletta + Frandsen)

State retirement pension payouts and contributions (U.S. CensusAnnual Surveys of State Government Finances)

Employee contributions

Government contributionsBenefit payments

State covariates (population growth, employment, etc.)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 7 / 21

Data

Collective bargaining rights status for each state and year (Freemanand Valletta + Frandsen)

State retirement pension payouts and contributions (U.S. CensusAnnual Surveys of State Government Finances)

Employee contributionsGovernment contributions

Benefit payments

State covariates (population growth, employment, etc.)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 7 / 21

Data

Collective bargaining rights status for each state and year (Freemanand Valletta + Frandsen)

State retirement pension payouts and contributions (U.S. CensusAnnual Surveys of State Government Finances)

Employee contributionsGovernment contributionsBenefit payments

State covariates (population growth, employment, etc.)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 7 / 21

Data

Collective bargaining rights status for each state and year (Freemanand Valletta + Frandsen)

State retirement pension payouts and contributions (U.S. CensusAnnual Surveys of State Government Finances)

Employee contributionsGovernment contributionsBenefit payments

State covariates (population growth, employment, etc.)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 7 / 21

Table: Sample Means by Public Employee Collective Bargaining Law Status

AllRequired for >50% of

Public EmployeesNot required for >50% of Public Employees

N (number of state-years) 1,383 629 754

Fraction of public employees covered by collective bargaining requirement

0.46 0.97 0.03

Population 5,016,064 5,429,966 4,670,779

Total public employee retirement benefit expenditures ($1,000)

340,446 506,887 201,598

Total public employee retirement benefit expenditures / population ($1,000)

0.064 0.087 0.045

Total contributions to public employee retirement system ($1,000)

484,425 672,156 327,608

Employer contributions ($1,000) 330,435 481,261 204,613

Employee contributions ($1,000) 153,990 190,895 122,995

Fraction of contributions made by employees

0.36 0.32 0.40

CB law

Notes: number of state-year observations and means for the variables listed in the left-hand column. Data are from Valletta and Freeman (1988) and the Census Bureau's Historical Database on Individual Government Finances.

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 8 / 21

Identification strategy

0.2

.4.6

.81

1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000year

IowaEmployee Contribution Fraction by Year

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 9 / 21

Identification strategy

Yst = δCBst + X ′stβ + α0s + γt + f (s, t) + εst

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 10 / 21

-100

,000

010

0,00

020

0,00

030

0,00

0es

timat

ed c

oeffi

cien

t

-5 0 5year relative to law change

Total Contributions to Public Employee Pension

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 11 / 21

-100

,000

010

0,00

020

0,00

030

0,00

0es

timat

ed c

oeffi

cien

t

-5 0 5year relative to law change

Total Employer Contribution to Public Employee Pension

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 12 / 21

-100

,000

-50,

000

050

,000

100,

000

estim

ated

coe

ffici

ent

-5 0 5year relative to law change

Total Employee Contribution to Public Employee Pension

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 13 / 21

-100

,000

010

0,00

020

0,00

030

0,00

0es

timat

ed c

oeffi

cien

t

-5 0 5year relative to law change

Total Public Employee Pension Benefit Expenditure

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 14 / 21

Results

Table: Estimated Effects of Collective Bargaining Requirements on PublicEmployee Pensions

X-sectionDependent variable (1) (2) (3) (4)

ln(retirement contributions) 0.198** 0.125* 0.172* 0.160*(0.0746) (0.0732) (0.0864) (0.0844)

ln(employer contributions) 0.287*** 0.230*** 0.290*** 0.278***(0.0919) (0.0817) (0.0912) (0.0905)

ln(employee contributions) -0.169 -0.157 -0.0921 -0.0987(0.197) (0.131) (0.139) (0.137)

Fraction contributed by employee -0.0630** -0.0685*** -0.0751*** -0.0742***(0.0308) (0.0213) (0.0218) (0.0221)

ln(retirement benefits) 0.330*** 0.0947 0.138* 0.134*(0.0868) (0.0733) (0.0744) (0.0764)

Baseline controls? Y Y Y YState effects? N Y Y YState trends? N Y Y YRegion x year effects? N N Y YControls for right-to-work and urbanicity? N N N Y

Difference-in-differences

Notes: Regression coefficients and clustered standard errors (by state) on the collective bargaining (CB) law variable. All regressions control for year effects, state unemployment rate, state GDP, the natural log of the population, and the factors indicated in the bottom rows. Data are from Valletta and Freeman (1988) and the Census Bureau's Historical Database on Individual Government Finances. *Statistically significant at the .10 level; **at the .05 level; ***at the .01 level.

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 15 / 21

Results

Table: Estimated Effects of Collective Bargaining Requirements on PublicEmployee Pensions

X-sectionDependent variable (1) (2) (3) (4)

ln(retirement contributions) 0.198** 0.125* 0.172* 0.160*(0.0746) (0.0732) (0.0864) (0.0844)

ln(employer contributions) 0.287*** 0.230*** 0.290*** 0.278***(0.0919) (0.0817) (0.0912) (0.0905)

ln(employee contributions) -0.169 -0.157 -0.0921 -0.0987(0.197) (0.131) (0.139) (0.137)

Fraction contributed by employee -0.0630** -0.0685*** -0.0751*** -0.0742***(0.0308) (0.0213) (0.0218) (0.0221)

ln(retirement benefits) 0.330*** 0.0947 0.138* 0.134*(0.0868) (0.0733) (0.0744) (0.0764)

Baseline controls? Y Y Y YState effects? N Y Y YState trends? N Y Y YRegion x year effects? N N Y YControls for right-to-work and urbanicity? N N N Y

Difference-in-differences

Notes: Regression coefficients and clustered standard errors (by state) on the collective bargaining (CB) law variable. All regressions control for year effects, state unemployment rate, state GDP, the natural log of the population, and the factors indicated in the bottom rows. Data are from Valletta and Freeman (1988) and the Census Bureau's Historical Database on Individual Government Finances. *Statistically significant at the .10 level; **at the .05 level; ***at the .01 level.

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 16 / 21

Results

Table: Estimated Effects of Collective Bargaining Requirements on PublicEmployee Pensions

X-sectionDependent variable (1) (2) (3) (4)

ln(retirement contributions) 0.198** 0.125* 0.172* 0.160*(0.0746) (0.0732) (0.0864) (0.0844)

ln(employer contributions) 0.287*** 0.230*** 0.290*** 0.278***(0.0919) (0.0817) (0.0912) (0.0905)

ln(employee contributions) -0.169 -0.157 -0.0921 -0.0987(0.197) (0.131) (0.139) (0.137)

Fraction contributed by employee -0.0630** -0.0685*** -0.0751*** -0.0742***(0.0308) (0.0213) (0.0218) (0.0221)

ln(retirement benefits) 0.330*** 0.0947 0.138* 0.134*(0.0868) (0.0733) (0.0744) (0.0764)

Baseline controls? Y Y Y YState effects? N Y Y YState trends? N Y Y YRegion x year effects? N N Y YControls for right-to-work and urbanicity? N N N Y

Difference-in-differences

Notes: Regression coefficients and clustered standard errors (by state) on the collective bargaining (CB) law variable. All regressions control for year effects, state unemployment rate, state GDP, the natural log of the population, and the factors indicated in the bottom rows. Data are from Valletta and Freeman (1988) and the Census Bureau's Historical Database on Individual Government Finances. *Statistically significant at the .10 level; **at the .05 level; ***at the .01 level.

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 17 / 21

Results

Table: Estimated Effects of Collective Bargaining Requirements on PublicEmployee Pensions

X-sectionDependent variable (1) (2) (3) (4)

ln(retirement contributions) 0.198** 0.125* 0.172* 0.160*(0.0746) (0.0732) (0.0864) (0.0844)

ln(employer contributions) 0.287*** 0.230*** 0.290*** 0.278***(0.0919) (0.0817) (0.0912) (0.0905)

ln(employee contributions) -0.169 -0.157 -0.0921 -0.0987(0.197) (0.131) (0.139) (0.137)

Fraction contributed by employee -0.0630** -0.0685*** -0.0751*** -0.0742***(0.0308) (0.0213) (0.0218) (0.0221)

ln(retirement benefits) 0.330*** 0.0947 0.138* 0.134*(0.0868) (0.0733) (0.0744) (0.0764)

Baseline controls? Y Y Y YState effects? N Y Y YState trends? N Y Y YRegion x year effects? N N Y YControls for right-to-work and urbanicity? N N N Y

Difference-in-differences

Notes: Regression coefficients and clustered standard errors (by state) on the collective bargaining (CB) law variable. All regressions control for year effects, state unemployment rate, state GDP, the natural log of the population, and the factors indicated in the bottom rows. Data are from Valletta and Freeman (1988) and the Census Bureau's Historical Database on Individual Government Finances. *Statistically significant at the .10 level; **at the .05 level; ***at the .01 level.

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 18 / 21

Results

Table: Estimated Effects of Collective Bargaining Requirements on PublicEmployee Pensions

X-sectionDependent variable (1) (2) (3) (4)

ln(retirement contributions) 0.198** 0.125* 0.172* 0.160*(0.0746) (0.0732) (0.0864) (0.0844)

ln(employer contributions) 0.287*** 0.230*** 0.290*** 0.278***(0.0919) (0.0817) (0.0912) (0.0905)

ln(employee contributions) -0.169 -0.157 -0.0921 -0.0987(0.197) (0.131) (0.139) (0.137)

Fraction contributed by employee -0.0630** -0.0685*** -0.0751*** -0.0742***(0.0308) (0.0213) (0.0218) (0.0221)

ln(retirement benefits) 0.330*** 0.0947 0.138* 0.134*(0.0868) (0.0733) (0.0744) (0.0764)

Baseline controls? Y Y Y YState effects? N Y Y YState trends? N Y Y YRegion x year effects? N N Y YControls for right-to-work and urbanicity? N N N Y

Difference-in-differences

Notes: Regression coefficients and clustered standard errors (by state) on the collective bargaining (CB) law variable. All regressions control for year effects, state unemployment rate, state GDP, the natural log of the population, and the factors indicated in the bottom rows. Data are from Valletta and Freeman (1988) and the Census Bureau's Historical Database on Individual Government Finances. *Statistically significant at the .10 level; **at the .05 level; ***at the .01 level.

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 19 / 21

Results

Table: Estimated Effects of Collective Bargaining Requirements on PublicEmployment and Payroll

X-sectionDependent variable (1) (2) (3) (4)

ln(state government payroll) 0.0841 0.0293 0.0169 0.0131(0.0550) (0.0211) (0.0227) (0.0216)

ln(other government payroll) 0.0793 -0.0221 -0.0106 -0.0106(0.0682) (0.0188) (0.0200) (0.0204)

ln(total government payroll) 0.0972* -0.0209 -0.00938 -0.0171(0.0496) (0.0191) (0.0250) (0.0237)

ln(state government FTE employment) -0.0659 -0.0122 -0.0272 -0.0312*(0.0507) (0.0205) (0.0174) (0.0184)

ln(other government FTE employment) -0.0905* -0.0240 -0.0154 -0.0143(0.0489) (0.0204) (0.0223) (0.0227)

ln(total government FTE employment) -0.0639** -0.0317 -0.0216 -0.0279(0.0295) (0.0191) (0.0229) (0.0223)

Baseline controls? Y Y Y YState effects? N Y Y YState trends? N Y Y YRegion x year effects? N N Y YControls for right-to-work and urbanicity? N N N Y

Difference-in-differences

Notes: Regression coefficients and clustered standard errors (by state) on the collective bargaining (CB) law variable. All regressions control for year effects, state unemployment rate, state GDP, the natural log of the population, and the factors indicated in the bottom rows. Data are from Valletta and Freeman (1988) and the Census Bureau's Historical Database on Individual Government Finances. *Statistically significant at the .10 level; **at the .05 level; ***at the .01 level.

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 20 / 21

What do these results mean?

Dollar impact of collective bargaining rights:

∆X = nCB X̄ δ̂/(1 + δ̂

). (1)

$11.6B additional annual government pension payouts (29.2 percentof difference in growth between CB and non-CB states

$9.4B additional annual government contributions (61.9 percent ofdifference in growth)

$2B less employee contributions annually

$2517 additional compensation per worker (no evidence of crowd outof wages)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 21 / 21

What do these results mean?

Dollar impact of collective bargaining rights:

∆X = nCB X̄ δ̂/(1 + δ̂

). (1)

$11.6B additional annual government pension payouts (29.2 percentof difference in growth between CB and non-CB states

$9.4B additional annual government contributions (61.9 percent ofdifference in growth)

$2B less employee contributions annually

$2517 additional compensation per worker (no evidence of crowd outof wages)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 21 / 21

What do these results mean?

Dollar impact of collective bargaining rights:

∆X = nCB X̄ δ̂/(1 + δ̂

). (1)

$11.6B additional annual government pension payouts (29.2 percentof difference in growth between CB and non-CB states

$9.4B additional annual government contributions (61.9 percent ofdifference in growth)

$2B less employee contributions annually

$2517 additional compensation per worker (no evidence of crowd outof wages)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 21 / 21

What do these results mean?

Dollar impact of collective bargaining rights:

∆X = nCB X̄ δ̂/(1 + δ̂

). (1)

$11.6B additional annual government pension payouts (29.2 percentof difference in growth between CB and non-CB states

$9.4B additional annual government contributions (61.9 percent ofdifference in growth)

$2B less employee contributions annually

$2517 additional compensation per worker (no evidence of crowd outof wages)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 21 / 21

What do these results mean?

Dollar impact of collective bargaining rights:

∆X = nCB X̄ δ̂/(1 + δ̂

). (1)

$11.6B additional annual government pension payouts (29.2 percentof difference in growth between CB and non-CB states

$9.4B additional annual government contributions (61.9 percent ofdifference in growth)

$2B less employee contributions annually

$2517 additional compensation per worker (no evidence of crowd outof wages)

Frandsen and Webb (BYU) Public Employee Pensions and Collective Bargaining Rights: Evidence from State and Local Government FinancesJuly 18, 2017 21 / 21

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