Wednesday, December 05, 2018

If California Is So Flush With Money, Why Not Lower Taxes?

Because the state is not really flush with money:
It’s become common folklore that California is booming and incoming Governor Newsom and the Democratic supermajority have more taxpayer money than they will know how to spend, save, or invest. Nothing could be farther from the truth; and it’s the California voters and taxpayers who will continue to be pay for this mistake. We literally owe trillions that isn’t being discussed. Just the estimated payments on public employee pensions in California will increase from $31 billion in today’s dollars to $59 billion in 2024; and this number is based on non-recessionary conditions or a major correction in the stock market. And California immediately needs $800 billion to over $1 trillion worth of infrastructure repairs, upgrades and new construction.

A conservative estimate of California’s total debt by the California Policy Center in a 2017 study – before new tax and bond obligations recently voted in were factored – puts California’s total local and state debt at $1.3 trillion. The Stanford University Pension Institute (www.pensiontracker.org) in 2017 calculated California’s unfunded liability at $1.4 trillion and CalPERS also with an unfunded liability of $1.4 trillion, with CalSTRS billions underwater as well to give, “real state debt of $2.8 trillion.”

Whichever calculation is used California owes trillions and doesn’t have a plan in place to address this issue. What should be clear is that California does not have a surplus or anything near a surplus factoring in total debt and infrastructure for a basic, functioning society California citizens and non-citizens expect.
The liberals will tell you, though, about the worker's paradise here in the Iron Pyrite State. We have so much money that community college will soon be "free", as will the pony provided to every resident of the state on his/her/zer/xer 10th birthday.

3 comments:

Pseudotsuga said...

The word "flush" is rather ironic here...
But it's hard to do that when your state has water problems, and no will to get rid of the waste products clogging up the system.

Auntie Ann said...

Which is why I tell our kids to leave the state for college or after graduation, and never come back...except to visit.

Anonymous said...

Out of state fees could be bypass by having them finish their senior year of high school in the state they wish to go to college.