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The Cryptocurrency Collapse Spells Trouble For Teacher Pensions. Here鈥檚 How

By Mark Lieberman 鈥 December 07, 2022 4 min read
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Several public pension funds that serve thousands of teachers stand to lose tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars because of investments in the collapsing cryptocurrency company FTX.

FTX, a company based in the Bahamas that provides a platform for users to exchange digital currency, filed for bankruptcy last week and a into whether it misused millions in customer funds to prop up failing parts of its business. Its CEO, Sam Bankman-Fried, has embarked on a that has drawn to the collapse of a company that attracted a slew of venture capitalist and celebrity cheerleaders.

The link between this corporate mishegoss and K-12 schools might not be apparent at first. But Anthony Randazzo, the executive director of the Equable Institute, a nonprofit that analyzes retirement systems, last week 15 public pension funds in 11 states that will suffer from FTX鈥檚 financial meltdown.

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Two of those, in Illinois and New York, specifically provide pensions to K-12 teachers. Several others, in states like Alaska, Maryland, and Tennessee, fund pensions for teachers as well as other public employees like police officers and civil servants. The fallout extends beyond U.S. borders, too鈥攖he Ontario teacher pension system is to failed FTX returns.

The pension systems didn鈥檛 invest in FTX directly. Instead, they invested in private equity or venture capital firms that in turn directed some funds toward FTX. Untangling those investments has been tricky, Randazzo said.

鈥淭he lack of transparency is in itself part of the problem that this FTX story has unearthed,鈥 Randazzo said.

Josh McGee

Josh McGee, a research assistant professor in the University of Arkansas鈥 College of Education and Health Professions who extensively studies the K-12 retirement system, compares the current FTX debacle to the 2001 fall of Enron, the massive energy company that went bankrupt after committing widespread accounting fraud. That situation, too, put a dent in public pensions, .

McGee believes some fault lies with the private equity firms and other investors that failed to adequately scrutinize FTX before buying into the hype around its efforts to revolutionize global currency.

鈥淭hese firms are supposed to be the adults in the room,鈥 McGee said. But the FTX scandal is just the latest blow to teacher pensions, many of which already in recent months.

The FTX losses represent tiny fractions of 1 percent of the overall pension system for public school employees, which is . Still, the collapse of FTX could reverberate for K-12 school districts for years to come. Here鈥檚 how:

Employees may have to contribute more to their pensions.

Most states are already falling well short of their obligations to fund pensions for teachers and other employees. When revenue from investments falls short of intended targets, states are on the hook for the difference. Sometimes they require teachers to pay more into the systems, or increase districts鈥 payments to debt servicing.

The burden often falls to teachers to put more of their paychecks towards pensions, which already .

School budgets could take a hit.

States have finite amounts of money, even when they experience a surge in revenue as . If they鈥檙e devoting more money to paying down pension obligations, that means they鈥檙e devoting less money to other priorities, like classroom instruction and school building renovations.

That said, teachers and administrators shouldn鈥檛 panic: 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 so large in any individual plan where it鈥檚 going to be really painful to anybody,鈥 McGee said.

Pension systems could rethink their approach.

Pension experts have long highlighted the flaws with the current model: Teachers who don鈥檛 work a full career in the same place get left out; lack of transparency in investments facilitates confusion and corruption; districts bear the brunt when pension returns fall short of projections.

In less than two decades, the average share of districts鈥 annual budget that pays for pension obligations has nearly tripled, from 4.7 percent to 11.7 percent. In some states, it鈥檚 even higher.

Data: K-12 School District Contributions Per Pupil to Retirement Systems 2004 2022

District contributions are volatile, too. In Omaha, Neb., for instance, the school district in recent years has been contributing more than its minimum pension obligation. But proposed cuts to state aid could mean the district has to divert funds elsewhere, the .

鈥淭he last 20 years of pension investment and funding policy has only led to increasing costs and fewer resources available for today鈥檚 teachers and classrooms. Something鈥檚 gotta give there,鈥 McGee said. 鈥淗opefully FTX is the thing that makes us take a harder look.鈥

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