PDA

View Full Version : A Blue-State Bailout in Disguise



red states rule
09-15-2011, 03:43 AM
Looks like it is indeed more of the same. Obama wants to keep those union dues paying government workers on the payroll so their dues money ends up in his re-election fund

and we pay the tab





snip

Last Thursday, the president urged Congress to pony up roughly $200 billion in taxpayer money to "provide more jobs for teachers [and] more jobs for construction workers" and more money to carry out other state and local activities. He urges Congress to spend this money even after handing out hundreds of billions of dollars for similar purposes as part of the 2009 stimulus package, as well as a score and more billion dollars again in 2010.

These vast contributions to the coffers of state and local governments, though pitched as a jobs bill, are in reality the latest in a series of bailouts for debt-ridden state and local governments. They are of special benefit to states in the blue regions of the country where the president's most fervent supporters reside.

In many blue states, legislators have copied the politicians in Washington by running up state debts to extraordinary levels. Nationwide, state debt is running around $3 trillion. If unfunded pension liabilities are factored in, estimated liabilities leap forward by another $1 trillion to $3 trillion, depending on the optimism of the assumptions made.


snip


But federal fiscal bailouts put our federal system at risk. In essence, the national government is acting as if states are too big to fail. In the next financial crisis, the federal government may decide that states need to be treated like General Motors or, at least, be given ever bigger handouts of the kind the Obama administration seems committed to making.

But if the federal government is going to tacitly assume responsibility for state debts, then those $3 trillion in sovereign state debt must be added to the $14 trillion national debt that has already caused grave concern, pushing the current U.S. debt into the danger zone. Even if pension liabilities are ignored, the combined federal-state-local debt runs in excess of 120% of GDP.

The costs go beyond dollars and cents. The more often the federal government bails out the states, the more Washington bureaucrats will insist on regulating state and local affairs. At some point the United States will see the end of state fiscal sovereignty and the demise our federal system of government.


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904353504576568352231645730.html

fj1200
09-15-2011, 07:46 AM
Looks like it is indeed more of the same.

Of course, they need to double down so if the economy does recover then they add legitimacy to their original claim that Stimulus I was a success.

red states rule
09-16-2011, 03:29 AM
Of course, they need to double down so if the economy does recover then they add legitimacy to their original claim that Stimulus I was a success.


and Obama needs to make sure he keeps as many union workers on the payroll

Paying union dues

Union dues that will be donated to his re-election fund

It is nothing more than a massive money laundering scheme the Mafia would envy