July 15, 2012

Unfunded Pensions - In A Race With Student Loans To Be The Next Financial Crisis

 If people will look beyond the article's title and read the rest of the article, the interesting thing is the HUGE increase in the estimate for the unfunded public pension liability for Calif alone - over $100 Billion. This is going to continue to play out big time for other states and municipalities. Ask yourself where are these entities going to get this money from? If you are planning on receiving such a pension, what do you think is going to happen?
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/07/14/The-Train-that-Broke-Californias-Back

It's a race between the unfunded pension problem and the student loan problem which will be considered the U.S.'s next financial crisis. There are no winners for guessing correctly.
The text of the article:
The State of California was already facing a $19 billion budget deficit, shorted public schools $8 billion, and was set to release imprisoned rapists into “community probation” when the Legislature approved selling $4.6 billion in new state bonds to build 130 miles of railroad track through some of the most uninhabited farm country in Central California.
The arrogance of the leveraging the already insolvent state caused a volcanic public outrage, but the Legislature and Governor Jerry Brown were desperate to get their paws on $3.3 billion in federal grants from the Obama Administration. But in a shocking development, Moody’s Investor Services, who was expected to provide the credit rating to justify selling the debt, may have just torpedoed California’s credit rating by tripling their estimate of the state’s unfunded public pension liability from $38.5 billion to $109.1 billion liability and raising the annual cost of state pension funding by $7.3 billion.
California has long been ground zero for financially dysfunctional government. Under the California State Constitution, the Legislature is required to approve a “balanced budget” each year. At the start of the last year’s budget on July 1, 2011, California had an $8.2 billion budget deficit carry-over from the prior year. No problem for Sacramento political magicians; they simply estimated the state would collect $9.7 billion in capital gains taxes from the Facebook initial public offering.
Twelve months later, the state has collected less than $1 billion from Facebook and the deficit has grown by another $1.4 billion to $9.6 billion. This year, the Legislature passed another dicey “balanced budget” on the expectations voters would approve $8 billion in new sales and income taxes.
The key to California politicians continuing their Ponzi spending far above the state’s revenues has been the willingness of ratings agencies, like Moody’s, to dutifully collect huge consulting fees for providing the state with an “investment grade” credit rating. Armed with the Moody’s “Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval,” municipal bond investors have been willing to loan California huge amounts of cash.
But the bogus choo choo bonds may have been too toxic even for Moody’s high tolerance for government shenanigans; they were the proverbial “straw that broke the camel’s back.” If Moody’s issued an investment grade credit rating and the railroad bonds eventually default, the firm would undoubtedly be sued for billions of dollars by lots of angry retired people who tend to be the main buyers of municipal bonds.
This newfound conservatism by Moody’s comes at a very inopportune time for the State and its 58 counties and 478 cities. Each year, California governments have borrowed huge amounts of money by selling low-cost municipal bonds in late July to finance the period until they collect the majority of their tax revenues in December and April. The state was expecting to borrow $28 billion and municipal governments were anticipating borrowing anther $50 billion.
But any downgrades of the state or municipality debt from investment grade to “junk bond” would send the cost of borrowing up to Greek-like levels of 20%. This appears to be exactly what just happened to San Bernardino, California and forced the city to file for an emergency Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy. According to the Los Angeles Times:
The city's fiscal crisis has been years in the making, compounded by the nation's crushing recession and exacerbated by escalating pension costs, lucrative labor agreements, Sacramento's raid on redevelopment funds and a city reserve that is tapped out.
This same language could apply to most of the cities and counties in California over the last few years. The real reason for the collapse of San Bernardino and the growing panic is that Moody’s was about to downgrade the city’s credit rating to junk. With state and most local governments running out of cash, there will be more bankruptcies in California. It looks to me that it was the train that broke California’s back.

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