Government is not as frugal spending your tax
dollars. Bonds have been a major source of government waste. The amount of waste depends on the size and
duration of the Bond. A 30 year Bond,
paying 5% interest gives you a debt that is double the size of the Bond. If the duration is 20 or 10 years, the
interest cost is reduced proportionally.
Before the days of government trying to
increase its cash reserves, voters were inclined to approve or disapprove Bonds
based on their necessity or merit, these days, not so much. The sales pitch for all ESPLOST (sales tax
increase) votes for public schools was “it’s for the kids”. Knowing that school districts sell Bonds
immediately after the vote should tell you that your sales taxes will go to
their debt service fund. If the ESPLOST
raises $50 million a year and goes on for 5 years, the school board anticipates
receiving $250 million. If they want money up front and they sell 30 year Bonds
at 5%, the school district ends up spending $125 million on stuff and puts the
other $125 million into a paper shredder for interest and fees.
I never understood why a $1 billion a year
county public school system or county government would ever need to borrow
money. But without any voter objections,
they use Bond money to fund buying land and building schools.
Cities, Counties and other government
entities use Bonds to supplement revenue or build reserves. If their debt gets out of control, they go
broke. Elected officials are mobbed by developers who want local government to
redevelop private property. This is
never a good idea. Economic development
is best left in the hands of the free market investors, without government
subsidies.
Government can avoid selling Bonds if they
want to save money. They can budget
dollars to set up accrual accounts and use these accounts to fund construction.
The only folks who can justify borrowing
money are individuals who need a loan to buy a car, so they can get to
work. Likewise, they may buy a house and
eventually have an asset rather than just paying rent forever.
Government entities also have reserve
accounts you can find in their CAFR (Consolidated Audited Financial Report).
These funds are budgeted to accrual accounts and are invested. Most of these accounts are spread all over
and can amount to an entire years’ revenue.
They don’t tell you about that do they ?
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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