Massachusetts secures $9.4 billion in public pension contributions in 2024

Maura Healey, Governor of Massachusetts
Maura Healey, Governor of Massachusetts
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In 2024, Massachusetts received $9.4 billion in contributions to its public pension funds, according to data obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of Public Pensions.

Of that amount, $6.5 billion went to state pension funds, and the remaining $3 billion went to local government pension funds.

The U.S. Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of Public Pensions covers defined-benefit pension systems sponsored by recognized government units whose membership consists of public employees compensated with public funds. Local governments in the survey are defined as counties, municipalities, townships, school districts, and special districts.

The survey provides data on revenues, expenditures, financial assets, and membership for these pension systems, and detailed questionnaires can include additional measures such as liabilities.

Not all respondents provide complete information for every item; response rates vary by data element, which can affect the availability of certain figures in the published tables.

Massachusetts reported data from 103 pension systems, including 13 state-level pension funds and 90 local-level systems. The total number of pension system members was 708,243 (483,444 at the state level and 224,799 at the local level).

Contributions to Massachusetts’ Public Pension Funds in 2024
Local State Local & State
Employee Contributions $881,154,387 $1,994,049,118 $2,875,203,505
Government Contributions $2,073,062,867 $4,469,797,167 $6,542,860,034
Total Contributions $2,954,217,255 $6,463,846,285 $9,418,063,540

Information in this article was obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of Public Pensions. The source data can be found here.



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