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June 14, 2007
SACRAMENTO, CA – Retirees of the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS)
and California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRS) pump more than $1.4 billion per year into the far reaching
counties of Northern California, according to a recent economic study.
The study by the Applied Research Center of Sacramento State University found that 47,000 retirees living in Northern
California counties receive $1.1 billion per year in CalPERS and CalSTRS pension benefits. The counties include
Butte, Colusa, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen, Mendocino, Modoc, Nevada, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou,
Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Yuba.
When those retirees spend their retirement income, they produce an additional $265 million of economic activity,
commonly called a “ripple effect,” for a total impact of almost $1.4 billion on the regional economy.
“This is powerful evidence of the positive economic impact of CalPERS and CalSTRS pension benefits,” said CalPERS
Chief Executive Officer Fred Buenrostro. “The study demonstrates that CalPERS and CalSTRS retirees provide a
tremendous economic boost to Northern California.”
“We should not take for granted the beneficial economic impact of CalSTRS and CalPERS retirees,” CalSTRS Chief
Executive Officer Jack Ehnes said. “When retirees spend their retirement income, it fuels the economy and produces
economic benefits for all Californians.”
The $1.4 billion impact of CalPERS and CalSTRS pension payments produces $543 million of value added to the counties,
creating 9,122 jobs with a payroll of more than $222 million per year.
CalPERS and CalSTRS retirement benefits and related economic activity also generate more than $78 million
in state and local tax revenues for the region.
The economic impact data come from a larger study that found retirement benefits paid by CalPERS and CalSTRS
generate $21 billion of economic activity per year in the state.
The study was conducted by Dr. Robert Fountain, professor emeritus and director of the California State University,
Sacramento, Applied Research Center, and Dr. Robert Waste, professor of public policy and administration at CSUS.
In their analysis, the researchers used the economic impact model called IMPLAN (Impact Analysis for Planning),
which was developed by the federal government and is widely used and widely accepted for economic impact studies.
In addition to calculating the statewide impact, the study also breaks down the economic impacts by region and by
county.
CalSTRS is the second largest public pension fund in the U.S., with assets
of approximately $171 billion. It provides retirement benefits to nearly 800,000 active and retired California
public educators and their families.
CalPERS, with more than $245 billion in assets, is the largest public
pension fund in the U.S. It administers retirement plans covering approximately 1.5 million active and retired
California public employees and their families on behalf of more than 2,500 State, school, and local government
employers statewide.
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