Wednesday, March 14, 2012

California’s Welfare Crisis

The Greek tragedy is being played out in the US through California

Writes Professor Michael Boskin and Professor John Cogan at the Wall Street Journal, (hat tip Professor Antony Mueller) [bold emphasis mine]

No one should write off the Golden State. But it will take massive reforms to reverse its economic decline…

California's rising standards of living and outstanding public schools and universities once attracted millions seeking upward economic mobility. But then something went radically wrong as California legislatures and governors built a welfare state on high tax rates, liberal entitlement benefits, and excessive regulation. The results, though predictable, are nonetheless striking. From the mid-1980s to 2005, California's population grew by 10 million, while Medicaid recipients soared by seven million; tax filers paying income taxes rose by just 150,000; and the prison population swelled by 115,000.

California's economy, which used to outperform the rest of the country, now substantially underperforms. The unemployment rate, at 10.9%, is higher than every other state except Nevada and Rhode Island. With 12% of America's population, California has one third of the nation's welfare recipients.

Partly due to generous union wages and benefits, inflexible work rules and lobbying for more spending, many state programs and institutions spend too much and achieve too little. For example, annual spending on each California prison inmate is equal to an entire middle-income family's after-tax income. Many of California's K-12 public schools rank poorly on standardized tests. The unfunded pension and retiree health-care liabilities of workers in the state-run Calpers system, which includes teachers and university personnel, totals around $250 billion.

Meanwhile, the state lurches from fiscal tragedy to fiscal farce, running deficits in good times as well as bad. The general fund's spending exceeded its tax revenues in nine of the last 10 years (the only exceptions being 2005 at the height of the housing bubble), abetted by creative accounting and temporary IOUs.

There is no currency union to put the blame on this time.

Yet the above exposes much of the fraud in analyzing the Greek crisis. Both Greece and California have been plagued by the unsustainable welfare state system.

And like Greece, the repercussion has been a stream of ongoing business exodus

From Fox Business


1 comment:

Hans said...

Mr Te, most informative thread! The paralysis begins with extended control of the legislative body, especially by the Leftocrats...