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Glossary

The Permanent Fund comes with its own vocabulary. Here are the terms you'll hear, in plain English.

Alaska Permanent Fund
The state's ~$89 billion savings-and-investment fund, created by constitutional amendment in 1976 to convert oil wealth into a lasting financial asset owned by all Alaskans.
APFC (Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation)
The quasi-independent state corporation, created in 1980, that invests and manages the Fund. It is governed by a Board of Trustees and does not set the dividend.
Principal (the "corpus")
The permanent, non-spendable core of the Fund. Protected by the constitution, it can only be invested — never spent — unless voters amend the constitution.
Earnings Reserve Account (ERA)
The spendable account holding the Fund's realized investment profits. The Legislature can appropriate from it — for the dividend, state services, and inflation-proofing.
POMV (Percent of Market Value)
The rule, adopted in 2018, that caps the state's annual withdrawal at about 5% of the Fund's average market value over five years. Designed to make the draw sustainable.
The draw
The amount actually transferred out of the Earnings Reserve each year under the POMV rule, to be split between the dividend and government services.
PFD (Permanent Fund Dividend)
The annual payment made to eligible Alaska residents from the Fund's earnings. First paid in 1982; the amount is now set by the Legislature each year.
Royalty
The payment companies make to the resource owner — here, the State of Alaska — for extracting oil, gas, and minerals. At least 25% of mineral royalties must go into the Fund.
Inflation-proofing
Moving money from the Earnings Reserve into the Principal each year so inflation doesn't erode the Fund's real value. Under today's structure it requires an annual legislative appropriation.
Prudent-investor rule
The 2005 standard that lets trustees invest the Fund across diversified asset classes using professional judgment, rather than from a fixed legal list of allowed investments.
Unrestricted General Fund (UGF)
The pool of state money lawmakers can spend on almost anything. The Permanent Fund draw is now its single largest source — bigger than oil.
Sovereign wealth fund
A state-owned investment fund built from public resources or surpluses. Alaska's is the largest in the U.S.; Norway's, at over $2.1 trillion, is the largest in the world.
Single-account structure
A proposed reform to merge the Principal and Earnings Reserve into one fund governed by the POMV draw — acting as a spending cap and removing the annual inflation-proofing step.
Constitutional amendment
A change to the Alaska Constitution, which requires approval by the Legislature and a statewide public vote. It's the tool that would be needed to lock in a guaranteed dividend or a merged fund.

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