
Pension Politicization
October 26, 1999
Monday's Los Angeles Times gives as good an example as any as to how
easily government investment of pension funds can become politicized. The California
Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS), the nation's biggest public pension
system, controls $155 billion in workers' retirement assets. Yet, CalPERS's
investment practices have drawn it into a historical grudge match between Turks,
Greeks and Armenians.
CalPERS invests a portion of its funds in Turkey. A recent report sent to
CalPERS about Turkey's investment environment downplayed Turkey's World War
One-era mistreatment of ethnic Armenians, which resulted in untold numbers of
deaths. California's State Treasurer Philip Angelides, who is of Greek descent,
has protested the report. In turn, CalPERS Chairman Charles Valdes (whose descent
is unknown) has attacked Angelides, saying that the historical Greek animosity
toward Turks has colored Angelides judgment of the situation.
This whole ugly affair raises two larger questions for the Times: "Does
public money have a social conscience? Or is the sole focus of pension funds
to make the maximum return for the retiree?" Yet, the Times misses the
real question: "Who decides?" Do individuals decide how their money is to be
invested, or do politicians make those decisions for them? Do individuals decide
whether their money should have a social conscience, or does someone else force
their own social views on them?
Under a system of personal accounts, nothing prevents a worker from making
socially responsible investments, according to his own definition of social
responsibility. But nothing forces him to, either. Government directed investment
doesn't just make lower returns; it turns personal decisions into political
issues, with the results like those seen in California.
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