home bbs files messages ]

Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   alt.politics.economics      "Its the economy, stupid"      345,374 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 344,750 of 345,374   
   Julie Su Pig to All   
   How One Obvious Mistake Created Californ   
   04 Jun 24 20:40:42   
   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.home.repair   
   From: incompetence@govt.us   
      
   California’s budget went from an assumed $98 billion surplus, in which   
   there was so much cash in state coffers that Gov. Gavin Newsom was giving   
   away $50,000 to randomly selected individuals to get a COVID-19 vaccine,   
   to a projected $73 billion deficit in only about two years.   
   Much of this could have been avoided if, in 2022, California hadn’t made   
   obvious, enormously unrealistic revenue assumptions for future years that   
   falsely painted far too optimistic a fiscal portrait for the state. In a   
   nutshell, here is what happened: in fiscal year 2021-22, state tax   
   revenues rose around 55 percent—about $70 billion—over the previous fiscal   
   year. This revenue windfall significantly reflected taxpayers realizing   
   capital gains, particularly high-income taxpayers who were facing a   
   marginal tax rate of 13.3 percent at the time.   
      
   For decades, California’s revenues have been driven by a capital gains   
   roller coaster in which revenues spike in years in which the stock market   
   booms and investors sell stocks and other assets, after which capital   
   gains revenues decline. The 2021-22 fiscal year was the mother of all   
   capital gains roller coaster peaks. It seems obvious that the revenue   
   roller coaster would decline after that, particularly with the stock   
   market falling about 23 percent between the end of 2021 and mid-June 2022,   
   when the 2022-23 fiscal year budget was signed.   
      
   However, Newsom’s budget staff assumed that the revenue bonanza from 2021   
   would not just continue but would grow to an even bigger bonanza in future   
   years. These revenue assumptions were patently unrealistic, particularly   
   with the long-standing history of capital-gains revenue crashes following   
   booms and with the stock market declining considerably in real time during   
   the first half of 2022.   
      
   Despite this, Newsom’s staff predicted revenues for fiscal years 2022-23   
   and 2023-24 that were roughly $80 billion higher than what was realized.   
   To put the 2022-24 revenue prediction errors in perspective, New York is   
   the only state that had a general fund budget at that time exceeding this   
   error.   
      
   These unrealistic assumptions led Newsom in June 2022 when he signed the   
   budget to state that “No other state in American history has ever   
   experienced a surplus as large as this.” But when reality bit, it bit   
   hard, and the ephemeral surplus morphed into a deficit.   
      
   In this year’s budget proposal, Newsom’s revenue assumptions for the   
   future have declined enormously, by about $40 billion less per year. And   
   this is an important factor driving the Legislative Analyst’s Office to   
   forecast a $73 billion budget deficit for fiscal year 2024-25.   
      
   Another key factor driving the deficit forecast is that our current   
   budget, which ends at the end of next month, was based on these erroneous   
   assumptions and consequently rose far too much. Spending increased about   
   63 percent in the last five years to over $320 billion in the current   
   fiscal year. By comparison, the 1964-65 state budget, which was during the   
   heyday of California’s population growth (California’s population rose   
   over 25 percent in the decade of the 1960s), was $2.35 billion.   
      
   If the 1964-65 budget had grown to accommodate population growth and   
   accounted for inflation, then it would be just $38.6 billion today. Even   
   tripling that amount to allow for higher quality and/or higher cost public   
   goods and services now than were purchased back in the day would leave the   
   budget at about $116 billion today, compared to the actual budget of more   
   than $320 billion.   
      
   Having substantially overspent in previous years, Newsom and the   
   Legislature must now cut many programs to achieve a balanced budget for   
   fiscal year 2024-25. Newsom’s latest budget proposal for 2024-25 calls for   
   cutting hundreds of programs and using about $12 billion in reserves,   
   nearly half of the reserve account, in a $288 billion budget. The latest   
   budget proposal omits any discussion of how such enormous revenue   
   assumptions were made in previous years.   
      
   Newsom’s revised proposal cuts high-return investments in broadband   
   internet for poor communities, which includes installing high speed   
   internet for public libraries in rural areas, and programs for foster   
   kids. In addition, there are long-standing deficiencies within the state,   
   including $70 billion in deferred maintenance.   
      
   As programs are being cut, debates about budget priorities come to the   
   fore. One spending area receiving significant pushback is Newsom’s plan to   
   fund health care for all low-income people, irrespective of their   
   immigration status. This program, which has not been cut, this would cost   
   upwards of $3 billion per year and would include around 700,000 illegal   
   migrants.   
      
   Given the number of illegal border crossings at the southern border in   
   recent years, immigration is viewed as the number one problematic issue   
   facing the country, according to a recent Gallup poll. And with a promise   
   to provide free health care to all low-income people, it is perhaps not   
   surprising that San Diego now has the most illegal border crossings of any   
   location along the southern border.   
      
   California’s Legislature now has about four weeks to finalize a 2024-25   
   budget with Newsom. There is one silver lining to the budget reduction,   
   which is that proposed legislation to create a state-run single payer   
   health care system, which would outlaw private insurance and replace   
   Medicare, was killed due to its budget implications. Assembly Bill 2200,   
   the “Guaranteed Healthcare for All” Act, would perhaps cost over $500   
   billion per year.   
      
   Even though nearly all Californians have health insurance (92 percent in   
   2022), the advocates for this bill want the state to pay for all health   
   care for everyone, with a focus on health care equity. Eliminating AB 2200   
   is a big positive because I see no chance that the state could ever   
   realistically run such a program, given its many administrative failures   
   over time, ranging from the Department of Motor Vehicles, which was called   
   a “car wreck of a bureaucracy” in 2019 by the San Francisco Chronicle, to   
   the dysfunctional Employment and Development Department, which paid out   
   $32 billion in fraudulent unemployment claims during the pandemic, failed   
   to pay legitimate claims, and couldn’t answer the phones.   
      
   It is a sad situation when a budget crisis is needed to stop bad   
   government. But this is California.   
      
   https://www.hoover.org/research/how-one-obvious-mistake-created-   
   californias-budget-crisis   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca