The Alaska Permanent Fund Corp.’s exterior sign. There’s a nearly 50-50 chance that the Alaska Permanent Fund won’t have enough spendable money to pay dividends and the state’s bills at least once ...
JUNEAU — The Alaska Permanent Fund will start the next fiscal year on July 1 facing a $600 million shortfall. Lawmakers have earmarked $3.8 billion from the fund for next year’s budget and Permanent ...
The state agency that manages the Alaska Permanent Fund is again warning that it’s running low on spendable money. At a meeting in Anchorage on Monday, the managers called on the Legislature to amend ...
The spendable portion of the Alaska Permanent Fund is dwindling and could be exhausted entirely within three years, fund leaders were told during a regular quarterly meeting on July 12 in Anchorage.
In a paper he once wrote for the National Institute for Labor Relations Research, economist Barry Poulson, an emeritus professor at the University of Colorado and past president of the North American ...
Retirees who own a valuable home but little else are a large but underserved minority who worry about running out of money before they die. Their major need is for an effective way to convert their ...
The spending policy determines how much of the total return will be allocated and identified as spendable dollars and how much will be reinvested in the endowment investment pool. Total return is the ...
I strongly oppose the change to Alaska’s Constitution to allow spending from a proposed single-component Permanent Fund. Today, the Permanent Fund [PF] has two components, its Principal Account [PA] ...
The spendable portion of the Alaska Permanent Fund is dwindling and could be exhausted entirely within three years, fund leaders were told during a regular quarterly meeting on Wednesday in Anchorage.