UPDATED: Deadbeat States

Debt,Economy,States' Rights

            

Socialism is secondary to state squandering—and a consequence of it. America is a debtor nation. The defining characteristic of the Unites States is debt—public and private; macro and micro, federal and state.

I sincerely hope you are not invested in municipal bonds. The “$3 trillion municipal bond market, where state and local governments go to finance their schools, highways, and other projects,” is about to come crashing down.

“60 Minutes” (CBS): “By now, just about everyone in the country is aware of the federal deficit problem, but you should know that there is another financial crisis looming involving state and local governments.”

It has gotten much less attention because each state has a slightly different story. But in the two years, since the ‘great recession’ wrecked their economies and shriveled their income, the states have collectively spent nearly a half a trillion dollars more than they collected in taxes. There is also a trillion dollar hole in their public pension funds.

The states have been getting by on billions of dollars in federal stimulus funds, but the day of reckoning is at hand. The debt crisis is already making Wall Street nervous, and some believe that it could derail the recovery, cost a million public employees their jobs and require another big bailout package that no one in Washington wants to talk about.

‘The most alarming thing about the state issue is the level of complacency,’ Meredith Whitney, one of the most respected financial analysts on Wall Street and one of the most influential women in American business, told correspondent Steve Kroft.

Whitney made her reputation by warning that the big banks were in big trouble long before the 2008 collapse. Now, she’s warning about a financial meltdown in state and local governments.

‘It has tentacles as wide as anything I’ve seen. I think next to housing this is the single most important issue in the United States, and certainly the largest threat to the U.S. economy'” …

“…The problem with that, according to Wall Street analyst Meredith Whitney, is that no one really knows how deep the holes are. She and her staff spent two years and thousands of man hours trying to analyze the financial condition of the 15 largest states. She wanted to find out if they would be able to pay back the money they’ve borrowed and what kind of risk they pose to the $3 trillion municipal bond market, where state and local governments go to finance their schools, highways, and other projects.

‘How accurate is the financial information that’s public on the states? And municipalities,’ Kroft asked.

‘The lack of transparency with the state disclosure is the worst I have ever seen …’ Whitney said”

MORE.

UPDATE (Dec. 21): The Guardian (UK) has taken note: “US states have spent nearly half a trillion dollars more than they have collected in taxes, and face a $1tn hole in their pension funds. … American cities and states have debts in total of as much as $2tn.”

One thought on “UPDATED: Deadbeat States

  1. irongalt

    “I sincerely hope you are not invested in municipal bonds. The “$3 trillion municipal bond market, where state and local governments go to finance their schools, highways, and other projects,” is about to come crashing down.” – Quite so: municipal bonds amount to giving a thief a loan expecting him to pay it back. The feds will probably cook up a GM-style bailout: basically tell the state’s creditors to take a hike without any payment.

    Things are going to collapse…productive private industry in the US is simply not large enough to support the dead weights.

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