DB Pension Plans – Powerful Economic Drivers

By: Russ Kamp, CEO, Ryan ALM, Inc.

For regular readers of this blog or the research published at RyanALM.com, you know that I/we are huge supporters of defined benefit pension plans for many reasons. Not the least is the fact that asking the average American worker to fund, manage, and then disburse a “retirement” benefit with little to no disposable income, no investment acumen, and no crystal ball to help with longevity issues is just silly policy.

Importantly, public defined benefit pensions continue to be a major contributor to economic activity in the U.S. The sheer magnitude of public pensions asset bases (>$6 trillion) and the benefits that they annually pay ($418.3 billion in 2025) make them an economic force. These impressive stats and much more can be found in the Annual Survey of Public Pensions (ASPP) released recently by the U.S. Census Bureau.

The ASPP’s annual compendium provides revenues, expenditures, financial assets, and membership information about defined-benefit public pension systems. There is additional detailed actuarial data for state and locally administered defined-benefit public pension systems.

Survey Highlights:

  • In 2025, state and local governments invested $6.49 trillion in pension plans, up 8.46% from $5.98 trillion in 2024.
  • More than 37 million people (including inactive employees) participated in state and local pension plans in 2025.
  • Employees contributed nearly 25%, while governments contributed 75.2% of the total $315.0 billion contributed to state and local government pension plans in 2025.
  • State and local government pension plans in 2025 provided $418.25 billion in benefit payments to beneficiaries, up 3.40% from $404.46 billion in 2024. Much of that payment is spent in the recipient’s local community creating economic activity and jobs in the process.

Given the magnitude of the economic stimulus that DB pension plans provide, whether they be corporate, public, or multiemployer, they must be preserved and protected. The survey provides myriad statistics at the national level and for individual states. State and locally administered defined benefit plan information is also available. Just click on the link below.

Visit the Annual Survey of Public Pensions webpage for more information.

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