US. Pensylvania Governor and Treasurer push to cut Pension investment fees
Pennsylvania’s two large public-sector pension agencies got a message from Gov. Tom Wolf on Monday: cut the fees paid to outside firms handling billions in investments.
Wolf and Treasurer Joe Torsella said at a news conference that they hoped that the state government pension fund would find ways to save $46 million annually and the school employees’ fund about $100 million a year.
The two Democrats said Pennsylvania is near the top in the ranking of states that pay the highest percentage of pension-fund investment fees.
“This is something that we can do immediately,” said Wolf, noting the proposal should be accompanied by legislative changes to the system.
“There has been some progress,” Torsella said. “We’re suggesting the progress needs to be accelerated.”
They said that in the most recent year, the two funds paid out nearly $600 million in fees. Torsella said that number was likely less than the actual total.
A spokeswoman for the State Employees’ Retirement System, for state government workers, said it has been reducing fees and moving to passive investments that now make up about 40 percent of the fund.
Full Content: The Washington Times
Remember to subscribe to our free weekly newsletter for more news or subscribe to our service to get unlimited access.