Chicago’s $41 billion financial hole exposes city’s pension crisis
[February 06, 2026]
By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – Chicago finished fiscal year 2024 with a $41.1
billion gap between the money it has available to pay bills and the
obligations it owes, according to a new report from Truth in Accounting,
placing the city among the worst financially managed major cities in the
nation.
The nonprofit’s Financial State of the Cities 2026 report analyzed the
five largest U.S. cities using audited financial statements. Chicago
earned an “F” grade and a taxpayer burden of $42,600 per taxpayer.
Only New York City ranked worse, though Truth in Accounting CEO Sheila
Weinberg said Chicago’s finances appear stronger than they are because
key entities like Chicago Public Schools and the park district are
excluded from the city’s reports.
Despite the findings, Chicago officials continue to claim the city
operates under a balanced budget, a claim Weinberg said depends on what
she called “shenanigans” in the city’s accounting practices.
“They only include the expenses they’ve paid, not all the expenses
they’ve incurred,” Weinberg said. “They also include loan proceeds as
revenue and still claim the budget is balanced. In the real world,
borrowing money to balance your budget would be insane. But in
government budgeting, that’s how they do it.”

Chicago’s four major pension funds are among the most underfunded in the
nation, with only about 25 cents set aside for every dollar promised in
benefits, according to Weinberg. The city’s unfunded pension liability
exceeds total employee payroll by more than eight times.
Weinberg said Illinois leaders expanded police and firefighter pension
benefits to gain political favor despite severe underfunding, reducing
funding levels to about 17 cents for every dollar promised and
increasing the risk of a future federal bailout.
While pension funding has increased in recent years, Weinberg said the
city still contributes less than what actuaries say is required.
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“They fully fund the statutory requirement, not the actuarially
determined contribution,” she said. “That statutory requirement is
far less than what the actuaries say they should be paying.”
Weinberg explained the report is less about rankings and more about
what separates fiscally stable cities from those pushing costs into
the future.
“What we found is that the cities that actually fund the benefits
they promise are doing better,” Weinberg told TCS. “The ones that
don’t are the ones in trouble.”
Among the five cities analyzed, Los Angeles posted the lowest
taxpayer burden at $1,300 and earned a “C” grade. Weinberg said the
difference comes down to policy.
Los Angeles requires the city to fund both pensions and retiree
health care benefits at the level recommended by its actuaries, a
practice that is rare among governments but standard in the private
sector.
“They [Los Angeles] fund what their own actuaries say they should
fund, and they even go further by funding retiree health care
benefits,” Weinberg said. “As a result, they’re not pushing costs
onto future taxpayers the way other cities are.”
Truth in Accounting is now working with members of the U.S. Senate
to pursue federal legislation that would require state and local
governments to fully fund pension and retiree health care promises.
Weinberg said the effort mirrors the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act, which Congress passed in the 1970s after private
companies went bankrupt and left workers without promised pensions.
“State and local governments were left out, and that’s how we ended
up here,” said Weinberg.
Weinberg said Truth in Accounting is currently working with U.S.
Sen. Jim Banks of Indiana, arguing that without reform, taxpayers
nationwide could eventually be asked to bail out deeply underfunded
governments.
“We’re trying to stop that before it happens,” she said. |