Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.
OPINION: Can the U.S. Sustain the International Order?
We don’t often think that how the United States conducts itself at home has much impact on how we face the world, but it does. You’d be amazed at how closely people in countries all over the globe follow events here and count on the U.S. to lead the way. When it’s messy at home, it’s hard […]
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
We don’t often think that how the United States conducts itself at home has much impact on how we face the world, but it does. You’d be amazed at how closely people in countries all over the globe follow events here and count on the U.S. to lead the way. When it’s messy at home, it’s hard to sustain the strength and readiness to turn our attention outward.
Doing so is especially important right now because what we’ve come to term “the international order” is under stress. It’s not collapsing by any means, but U.S. leadership faces challenges and if we’re divided and unsettled at home, it will be much more difficult to respond appropriately.
What is the international order? It’s essentially the set of structures and values that evolved during the 20th century to resolve disputes, promote commerce and free trade, undergird economic development and investment, further contacts and exchanges between nations and their citizens, and protect human rights. It’s based on mutually negotiated rules and initiatives that, in a well-functioning world, are promoted by institutions such as the United Nations, the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, the World Trade Organization, the World Health Organization, and others.
These days, though, it’s fair to say that there’s no aspect of the order we once took for granted that isn’t at least facing questions. This is in part because now, both China and Russia are asserting their interests and, often, working actively to undermine ours. At the same time, the U.S. role is less prominent than it once was. Our allies, especially after the four years of the Trump administration, are uncertain of our commitment to global leadership given that we questioned longtime alliances, withdrew from institutions, pulled out of international accords, and in general pulled back from the web of alliances and agreements that we had helped shape in earlier years. Understandably, our friends and allies wonder how much they can count on us, and our adversaries are eager to test us.
At the same time, forces beyond the control of any government are reshaping the global picture. Nationalism is stronger, conflicts between countries seem to be ratcheting up, and many societies are struggling with growing diversity, declining tolerance, and a turn toward authoritarianism. On the whole, international power is less concentrated and more widely distributed, which presents challenges to global institutions and makes it more difficult to pursue much-needed reforms within them.
In this situation, it’s crucial that democracies such as the U.S., Europe, Japan, and Canada recognize the importance of the role they play in sustaining and revitalizing the international order. It’s by no means a given that it can endure, but the democracies have an advantage: for many people around the world, the more authoritarian alternatives are not especially appealing.
Even so, the work of strengthening the world order will require a concerted effort that blends both cooperation and firmness. We must strengthen our alliances of course, as well as shore up and broaden arms-control efforts. Countering authoritarianism in all its facets will be an ongoing challenge. And we need constantly to gauge how best to be a benign world power, helping to resolve conflicts and slow to use force — not ruling it out, but relying on it wisely and only when necessary.
Finally, as I suggested at the beginning, our strength on all these fronts will come from making sure that we are strong at home: that our economy is robust, our finances and debt are manageable, our elections are fair and well run, our infrastructure is revitalized, we invest in the future of our businesses through research and development, and we invest in the future of the American people by focusing attention on education and skills development. If we can do all that, then we will have earned the right to lead the world in navigating the challenges facing the international order.
Lee Hamilton, 90, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south central Indiana.

NYS pension fund has largest- ever annual investment return
Fund returned 33.55 percent in latest fiscal year, ending March 31 ALBANY, N.Y. — The New York State Common Retirement Fund’s estimated overall investment return was 33.55 percent for the state fiscal year (SFY) that ended March 31. The figure reflects the financial markets’ “dramatic rebound” from the late March, 2020 lows reached during the
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
Fund returned 33.55 percent in latest fiscal year, ending March 31
ALBANY, N.Y. — The New York State Common Retirement Fund’s estimated overall investment return was 33.55 percent for the state fiscal year (SFY) that ended March 31.
The figure reflects the financial markets’ “dramatic rebound” from the late March, 2020 lows reached during the COVID-19 pandemic, the office of New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli announced May 26.
The return on investments increased the fund’s value to an estimated $254.8 billion.
“The state pension fund rode the market rebound from the depths of the pandemic and enjoyed the largest one-year investment return in its history,” DiNapoli said. “This outsized return reinforces the fund’s position as one of the strongest in the nation, but it comes with a caution. Markets remain volatile and as unpredictable as ever.”
The fund’s value reflects retirement and death benefits of $13.66 billion paid out during the fiscal year.
Employer-contribution rates are determined by investment results over a multi-year period along with numerous other actuarial assumptions. Those assumptions include wage growth, inflation, age of retirement, and mortality.
Contribution rates are determined based on recommendations from the retirement system’s actuary in September. State and local governments, which consistently pay their contributions “in good times and bad” are “integral to the fund’s strength,” DiNapoli’s office noted.
As of March 31, the fund had 52.82 percent of its assets invested in publicly traded stocks, which produced investment returns exceeding 60 percent in the last fiscal year. The remaining fund assets by allocation are invested in cash, bonds, and mortgages (23.14 percent), private equity (10.57 percent), real estate and real assets (8.24 percent), and credit, absolute-return strategies, and opportunistic alternatives (5.23 percent).
The fund’s long-term expected rate of return is 6.8 percent, according to DiNapoli’s office.
The New York State Common Retirement Fund is the third largest public pension fund in the U.S., per DiNapoli’s office.
The fund holds and invests the assets of the New York State and Local Retirement System on behalf of more than 1 million state and local government employees and retirees and their beneficiaries.
Report: U.S. 401(k) market now worth more than $6 trillion
U.S. 401 (k) plan assets grew by a trillion dollars to more than $6 trillion in the most-recent plan year, according to a May 2021 report from Judy Diamond Associates. The fifth annual 401(k) Plan Benchmark Report “examines almost 600,000 active 401(k) plans, covering more than 88 million eligible workers and $6 trillion in total retirement assets,”
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
U.S. 401 (k) plan assets grew by a trillion dollars to more than $6 trillion in the most-recent plan year, according to a May 2021 report from Judy Diamond Associates.
The fifth annual 401(k) Plan Benchmark Report “examines almost 600,000 active 401(k) plans, covering more than 88 million eligible workers and $6 trillion in total retirement assets,” according to a release from the firm. The analysis encompassed 27 industrial groupings, which “were reviewed and segmented by size, from micro plans with 1-10 people to mega plans with 5,000 or more participants.”
Other findings from the report include the following:
• Average account balances grew to $109,823, with average contributions rising about 8 percent
• Actual participation rates remained at 81 percent year over year
• The median Rate of Return (RoR) on investments is “tightly clustered among all industries,” with all 27 sectors studied reporting 20 to 22 percent RoR
“Our goal is to present unbiased, data-supported insights into the 401(k) plans offered by employers in a wide variety of industries,” said study author Eric Ryles, VP of customer solutions at Judy Diamond Associates. “Our findings help plan sponsors determine whether or not they are taking the right steps to deliver positive retirement outcomes for their employees, empowering them to identify and correct deficiencies in their plans.”
The 401(k) Plan Benchmark Report can be accessed for free at: https://www.judydiamond.com/products/401k-benchmark-report/
Judy Diamond Associates is an employee-benefits research firm based in Washington, D.C. The firm provides lead-generation and market-intelligence tools to insurance and financial-services firms.

VIEWPOINT: Record-high public pension-fund return won’t necessarily mean lower pension costs
The cost to taxpayers of New York’s generous (and constitutionally guaranteed) pension benefits for state and local-government employees depends largely on the performance of pension-fund investments. So when Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli announced recently that the state Common Retirement Fund had earned a record return of 33.55 percent last year — nearly five times the assumed rate —
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
The cost to taxpayers of New York’s generous (and constitutionally guaranteed) pension benefits for state and local-government employees depends largely on the performance of pension-fund investments. So when Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli announced recently that the state Common Retirement Fund had earned a record return of 33.55 percent last year — nearly five times the assumed rate — it was a clear sign that taxpayers will be saving money in the near future, right?
Well, no — not necessarily. For one thing, as retail investors are regularly warned, past performance is no guarantee of future results. And in the case of the Common Retirement Fund — which underwrites the New York State and Local Retirement System (NYSLRS), to which most state and local employees outside New York City belong — past patterns suggest future results won’t be so hot.
[We have seen a] highly volatile pattern of state pension-fund returns over the past 24 years, starting near the peak of the 1990s bull market, compared to the Common Retirement Fund’s assumed rate of return throughout the period. The Common Retirement Fund’s down-and-up performance over the past two years was the unique product of the pandemic and federal policy responses to it. As measured by the S&P 500, domestic stock prices peaked in mid-February, 2020, then nose-dived by more than 30 percent by the end of March as COVID-19 spread across the world, turning what looked like an above-par gain into a 2.7 percent loss for the Common Retirement Fund in FY 2020. But over the next several months, spurred by Federal Reserve policies that drove market interest rates down near zero while offering bailouts of troubled corporate debts, the markets rebounded sharply, recovering all those losses and then some.
The Common Retirement Fund’s previous record return was set in 1998, when it earned 30.4 percent. It came close to equaling that performance in 2004, when it returned 28.8 percent. But in the five years immediately following those big gains, the fund earned annual average returns of 1.6 percent and 1.1 percent respectively.
The fund’s assumed rate of return was a highly optimistic 8 percent before DiNapoli began a series of prudent reductions — to 7.5 percent in 2010, 7.25 percent in 2015, and 6.8 percent last year. Even at 6.8 percent, the rate of return that the pension fund literally counts on is considerably higher than the yields from low-risk U.S. Treasury or high-quality corporate bonds, which currently range from 2.3 percent to 3.3 percent.
DiNapoli has never been willing to project future employer-pension contributions more than one year into the future, but the governor’s Division of the Budget (DOB) is less shy about doing so. And prior to this year’s record investment return, DOB had been forecasting — in both the executive budget and enacted budget financial plans — that tax-funded employer-contribution rates would rise to their highest levels in more than 50 years.
The enacted financial plan for FY 2021-22 says DOB expects contribution rates to increase because the assumed rate of return has been reduced, and because the pension fund’s actuary has shifted to a new “mortality table” indicating that pension recipients are living longer and thus will cost more. Without offering specifics, DOB also says it forecasts “a lower rate of return compared to the current assumed [6.8 percent] rate of return by NYSLRS.”
Employer-contribution rates most recently had been pegged by the comptroller at 28.3 percent of total salaries for members of the Police and Fire Retirement System (PFRS), and 16.2 percent of salaries for all other types of state and local workers, who belong to the Employee Retirement System (ERS). The DOB was forecasting that those rates would shoot up in three years to nearly 41 percent for PFRS members and 26.4 percent for ERS members. Based on that, DOB also forecast that the state government’s pension contribution alone will rise from $2.26 billion in FY 2022 to $3.55 billion in 2025. Applying the same higher rates to total reported 2020 salaries of all other government employers in the NYSLRS, local-government pension costs would increase during the same period by a total of $2.5 billion.
However, the DOB projection did not assume the 33.55 percent record return announced by DiNapoli shortly after the financial plan was released. This would surely reduce its projected increase in pension costs — but as explained above, not necessarily by all that much. As long as Comptroller DiNapoli sticks with appropriately prudent actuarial assumptions, pension costs over the next few years won’t be going down, and quite possibly will be going up. The only question is by how much.
E.J. McMahon is the founder and a senior fellow at the Empire Center for Public Policy, Inc., an independent, non-partisan, nonprofit think tank based in Albany. Contact him at ejm@empirecenter.org. This article first appeared in the Empire Center’s blog.

Pathfinder Bank names Tryniski VP, credit manager
OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bank has promoted Nick Tryniski to VP, credit manager from credit analyst. That’s according to Ronald Tascarella, executive VP, chief banking officer, who announced the promotion on June 8. “We are happy to recognize Nick with this promotion,” Tascarella said. “With his extensive knowledge of lending, leadership skills and his commitment
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
OSWEGO, N.Y. — Pathfinder Bank has promoted Nick Tryniski to VP, credit manager from credit analyst.
That’s according to Ronald Tascarella, executive VP, chief banking officer, who announced the promotion on June 8.
“We are happy to recognize Nick with this promotion,” Tascarella said. “With his extensive knowledge of lending, leadership skills and his commitment to customer service, Nick has proven to be a tremendous asset to the continued growth of Pathfinder Bank’s lending division.”
As credit manager for Pathfinder Bank, Tryniski will manage residential and commercial underwriting for the bank. He also brings to customers his knowledge of lending — and personal experience as a credit analyst and lender — along with his team of analysts and residential underwriters, Pathfinder Bank said.
Prior to joining Pathfinder Bank as a credit analyst in 2016, Tryniski worked at M&T Bank. He earned a degree in finance from Le Moyne College.
Headquartered in Oswego, Pathfinder Bank is a state-chartered commercial bank that is a wholly owned subsidiary of Pathfinder Bancorp, Inc, (NASDAQ: PBHC). The bank has 10 full-service offices located in its primary market areas of Oswego and Onondaga County and one limited purpose office in Oneida County.

Syracuse’s American Rescue Plan funding to target infrastructure, jobs, city government operations
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh on Friday outlined plans for the city’s $123 million in federal aid through the American Rescue Plan Act
2021 Wealth Management Special Report
Click to View the 2021 Wealth Management Special Report
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
2021 Sales & Marketing Executive Awards Supplement
View this year’s Sales & Marketing Executive Awards Supplement
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.

Le Moyne’s Dolphin Tank competition awards thousands in development funds to student entrepreneurs
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College’s fifth annual Dolphin Tank competition has provided funding for 10 student-founders who have launched “successful, growing” businesses, the college

McFarland Johnson launches subsidiary focused on infrastructure-management technology
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. — McFarland Johnson (MJ) has announced the creation of a wholly owned subsidiary focused on developing technology-based, infrastructure-management products. The subsidiary is called
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.