Please consider some prime examples from No Defaults for States as California Favors Bonds Over Workers
- Illinois let $5 billion of bills go unpaid.
- Minnesota is delaying corporate and sales-tax refunds, postponing school and medical aid and setting up a $600 million bank line of credit.
- New Jersey is planning to refinance about $250 million of general-obligation bonds to push $202.5 million of debt-service costs into future fiscal years.
- Illinois, is selling $900 million of bonds for capital projects this week.
- 22 states put staff on temporary leave.
- Arizona sold its House of Representatives and Senate buildings.
- California solicited bids for 11 of its office complexes.
- Delaware saved $29,000 by eliminating flowers at the state psychiatric hospital and health department.
- California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, facing a $19 billion budget deficit for the year that began this month, is trying to force 200,000 state workers onto minimum wages temporarily.
All of those half-assed measures assume the economy is going to get better later this year. Instead I suggest states should expect a Second-Half Housing and Durable Goods Crash.
For now, the municipal bond market seems placated with states not running out of money simply because they have stopped paying bills and/or have temporarily expedited income tax collection.
I do not know how long that can last, but the second-half is likely to be quite telling.
Too be sure, states are making some needed cutbacks. However, the fiscal game playing exceeds needed austerity measures by a mile.
California alone is $19 billion in the hole and that is after California enacted a temporary 1 percentage point increase in the sales tax rate (expected to generate about $4.5 billion in fiscal 2010) and after it accelerated income tax collection.
It is also after patching a $24 billion hole earlier in the year.
Literally no state is remotely prepared for the second-half tsunami coming down the pike.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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