(Juneau Empire file photo)

(Juneau Empire file photo)

Opinion: Permanent Fund troubles make for sad music

Alaskans are fiddling while the Permanent Fund burns

  • By Larry Persily
  • Thursday, August 22, 2024 5:10pm
  • Opinion

To modernize an old expression, Alaskans are fiddling while the Permanent Fund burns.

Not literally, of course. The Permanent Fund’s stocks and bonds, real estate deeds, lease agreements and investment contracts are all safely stored. But the fiddling part, that’s true.

And because it’s a state election year, we can expect a lot of candidates to turn up the volume on their fiddles. No matter how off-key the music, no one ever loses an election by playing happy tunes about big Permanent Fund dividends.

No one wins an election talking about principal, realized and unrealized gains, spendable and nonspendable fund balances and the fund’s earnings reserve.

Though all of that is important for the $81 billion Permanent Fund. And it’s monumentally important for Alaskans who depend on the fund’s investment earnings as the largest single source of state general purpose revenue for schools, roads, troopers, public health and healthy annual dividends.

The math is simple. The Legislature cannot spend the fund’s principal. That includes the fund’s share of state oil royalty checks, special legislative appropriations over the years to build up the principal, and earnings on those tens of billions of dollars.

The Legislature can spend for the public’s benefit the accumulated investment earnings not assigned to the principal.

The annual withdrawal from the earnings reserve is limited by law, to protect the fund from excessive drawdowns on political whims.

It all works well if the fund earns sufficiently higher investment returns than inflation. But inflation has been high and there is no guarantee that investments always will be higher, or high enough. That’s the future that confronts Alaskans today.

It is possible that the fund could run short of spendable money in the earnings reserve in the years ahead to cover its annual transfer to the state general fund. That’s the transfer that helps pay for everything Alaskans enjoy, such as public services, no state income or sales tax, and the beloved Permanent Fund dividend.

It’s math, not mysticism. The fund will still be rich, with an estimated $85 billion two years from now, or almost $91 billion four years from now. But projections show less of that wealth in the spendable earnings reserve and more in the untouchable principal column on the ledger.

Think of a cash flow problem in the billions. The state would be rich, but its checking account would be short.

“Certainly, this is the canary in the coal mine,” Deven Mitchell, CEO of the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp., said last month.

The inability to cover the annual transfer to help fund the state budget could come in the late 2020s or maybe early 2030s, Mitchell said. “We have a pretty long runway before it fully breaks. It’s just that, if your car starts making a funny noise, it’s usually cheaper to get it fixed right then than wait until it blows up.”

The fund has warned elected officials and the public of the car problem for years, but Alaskans keep fiddling, placing political gains over responsible public policy while too many candidates pledge allegiance to the dividend.

The Legislature and governor need to stop fighting over the amount of the dividend and place a constitutional amendment before voters to eliminate the line between spendable and nonspendable money in the fund. And include a constitutional limit on how much can be spent in any one year, to protect the savings account for the future.

As for the dividend, leave that out of the constitution. Solve the bigger problem first.

Larry Persily is the publisher of the Wrangell Sentinel.

More in Opinion

Gov. Mike Dunleavy is photographed during a visit to Juneau, Alaska, in November 2022 . (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Opinion: Alaska’s charter schools are leading the nation — It’s time to expand their reach

Expanding charter schools isn’t just about offering alternatives; it’s about giving every child the chance to succeed.

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Everyone pays the price of online shopping returns

Online shoppers in 2023 returned almost a quarter-trillion dollars in merchandise

Cars drive past the Alaska Permanent Fund Corp. building in Juneau on Thursday. This year’s Permanent Fund dividend will be $1,312, the state Department of Revenue announced. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire)
Opinion: The wisdom of late bloomers in education

In Alaska, the state’s 529 education savings plan isn’t just for children

U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, addresses a crowd with President-elect Donald Trump present. (Photo from U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan’s office)
Opinion: Sen. Sullivan’s Orwellian style of transparency

But even if he thinks it’s wrong, his commitment to self-censoring all criticism of Trump will prevent him from telling us

Rep. Sarah Vance, candidate for State House District 6, participates in a candidate forum hosted by the Peninsula Clarion and KBBI 890 AM at the Homer Public Library in Homer, Alaska, on Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Point of View: Vance out of touch in plea to ‘make more babies’

In order to, as she states, “make more babies,” women have to be healthy and supported.

Former Gov. Frank Murkowski speaks on a range of subjects during an interview with the Juneau Empire in May 2019. (Michael Penn / Juneau Empire File)
Opinion: A viable option: A railroad extension from the North Slope

It is very difficult for this former banker to contemplate amortizing an $11 billion project with over less than half a million Alaska ratepayers

Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks during a press conference March 16, 2024, at the Alaska State Capitol in Juneau. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: A budget that chooses the right policies and priorities

Alaska is a land of unmatched potential and opportunity. It always has… Continue reading

Gov. Mike Dunleavy explains details of his proposed state budget for next year during a press conference Dec. 12, 2014, at the Alaska State Capitol. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Governor fails at leadership in his proposed budget

It looks like he is sticking with the irresponsible approach

Therese Lewandowski. (Photo provided)
Point of View: Inflation, hmmm

Before it’s too late and our history gets taken away from us, everyone should start studying it

A state plow truck clears snow from the Kenai Spur Highway on Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2022, in Kenai, Alaska. (Jake Dye/Peninsula Clarion)
Opinion: Use of the brine shows disregard for our community

It is very frustrating that the salt brine is used on the Kenai Peninsula often when it is not needed

A cherished "jolly Santa head" ornament from the Baisden Christmas tree. (Photo provided)
Opinion: Reflections of holidays past

Our family tradition has been to put up our Christmas tree post-Thanksgiving giving a clear separation of the holidays

Screenshot. (https://dps.alaska.gov/ast/vpso/home)
Opinion: Strengthening Alaska’s public safety: Recent growth in the VPSO program

The number of VPSOs working in our remote communities has grown to 79