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Annual Survey of Public Pensions: State-Administered Defined Benefit Data Summary Report: 2013

Written by:
Report Number G13-ASPP-ST

INTRODUCTION

This report is part of a continuing series designed to provide information on the structure, function, employment, and finances of the United States’ nearly 90,000 state and local governments. The U.S. Census Bureau produces data quinquennially as part of the Census of Governments (CoG) in years ending in “2” and “7.” Additional statistics are produced annually and quarterly during the intercensal period from data collected from a series of surveys. These surveys provide a wealth of information on state and local government employment and financial activity.

This publication presents data on state-administered public pension systems based on information collected from the 2013 Survey of Public Pensions: State-Administered Defined Benefit Data. The data collected from these systems are for defined benefit plans only and do not include data for defined contribution plans or other postemployment benefit plans. Data in this report refer to fiscal years that ended between July 1, 2012, and June 30, 2013 (FY2013), and do not reflect data for the entire calendar year of 2013.

This survey covers the following pension system activities: revenues by state (earnings on investments, employee contributions, government contributions); expenditures by state (benefits, withdrawals, other payments); cash and investment holdings by state (governmental securities, corporate stocks and bonds, foreign and international securities, etc.); membership information by state (number of pension systems, total membership, beneficiaries receiving periodic payments); and liabilities information by state (covered payroll and pension obligations) for state-administered pension systems only.

For Census Bureau statistical purposes, a public-employee pension system is one that is financed by a separate accounting fund of the administering government, excluding pay-as-you-go insurance plans. It must have some type of assured revenue stream or dedicated revenue source other than appropriations from the administering government.

Other criteria exist for membership, such as funding and organization. A pension system’s members must consist of current or former public employees who are eligible for inclusion in the employment phase of the CoG. A pension system must have at least one separate identifiable fund within a recognized government unit, and it must be funded completely or partially with public contributions. A pension system must also be recognized as a government unit (as defined by the Census Bureau) that provides revenues, expenditures, financial assets, and membership information for public-employee pension systems.

Each pension system is considered an agency of the corresponding government, but the information in this publication reflects only the pension system portion of revenues, expenditures, and assets.

Downloadable Data

Individual Unit File

"Detailed financial item data for each state-administered public pension system (fixed length, no delimiter)"

Unit ID File

"Name of each state-administered public pension system (fixed length, no delimiter)"

Page Last Revised - December 16, 2021
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