California, once known for
job-creating mega-infrastructure projects like its famous aqueduct, is now more
known as a fiscally unhealthy welfare state. (Peter Bennett Danita
Delimont) 7/15/2016
California: For
years, the liberal media have lionized California Gov. Jerry Brown's economic
"miracle" in bringing the Golden State back from the dead and
balancing the state's budget. But his supposed miracle looks more like a mirage
by the day.
Thanks
to budget legerdemain, Brown and his Democratic allies in the legislature have
posed themselves as the fiscal saviors of California, making brave choices to
balance the books and get the economy growing again. But the fact is, the
nation's largest and still-wealthiest state is in a fiscal fix from which it
will be tough to extricate itself.
Democrats
boast of running a "surplus." What they don't say is they only run a
surplus by excluding costs for the state's out-of-control public-pension
programs. If a company did this, it would be accused of fraud. In
California, this gets you re-elected.
California's
total debt is $118.17 billion, but when you add in what it really owes, that surges to an
unbelievable $757 billion -- roughly equal to 46% of the state's total income.
This is why the Mercatus Center at George Mason University recently ranked
California 44th in the nation in terms of fiscal health.
Meanwhile,
a recent survey of the nation's CEOs again ranked California's business climate
dead last in the nation. Not surprisingly, according to business consultant Joe
Vranich, this has led to some 1,687 companies moving out of California since
2008 -- the latest being California fast-food icon Carl's Jr.
Says
Vranich, "California is considering imposing a broad set of new taxes, tax
extensions and fees on businesses in 2016 and 2017 -- a tsunami that may
trigger the worst demands on private-sector finances ever organized by the
state's politicians."
But
isn't Silicon Valley booming? Yes. But that's created a two-tier economy. In
2014, the most recent year for data, nearly half of all state income taxes were
paid by the top 1% in incomes -- which were boosted by capital gains from stock
options. In a tech downturn, which is inevitable, the state's chronic deficits
will once again reappear.
Spending
is out of control, with the next budget projecting $173 billion in outlays. As
recently as the 1990s, spending was less than $50 billion. California is just
one business-cycle downturn away from returning to $20 billion a year in deficits.
A
big part of this is priorities. Brown has focused on foolish global warming
initiatives, tax hikes and mindless regulation rather than initiatives that
would create jobs. Today, a third of all U.S. welfare recipients live in
California, which, with its generous welfare benefits, has become a magnet for
impoverished immigrants from around the world. A quarter of the population
lives near the poverty line.
California
once had the finest roads in the nation, and its vast water project literally
made the nation's second-largest city, Los Angeles, possible. Its public
elementary and secondary schools were once among the best, while its public
university system was hailed as the best in the world.
Today,
that's no longer the case. California is a massive welfare state.
"California's capital outlays have declined from about 20% of the
state budget in the 1960s to about 3% today," wrote Nobel prize-winning
economist Edward C. Prescott and UCLA economics professor Lee E. Ohanian, in a recent
column about what ails the state.
"California's political leaders once agreed that substantial
infrastructure investment was a major obligation of state government." No
more. There is no economic miracle. Just a mirage.
http://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/the-golden-states-fiscal-fraud/
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