Illinois near bankrupt - how about OK?
At multiple meetings of Tulsa County Republican Clubs, grassroots activists are quizzing State Legislators on the state budget which appears to kick financial crisis down the road with one time tricks and "fees" that are, at least, questionable. Some have drawn legal challenge.
Oklahoma could learn from Illinois.
Illinois is the perfect example of what happens when your state is run by fiscally irresponsible dunces for decades. The state is deeply buried in debt, and hasn’t passed a budget in over 700 days. 100% of their monthly revenue is being consumed by court ordered payments, and the Illinois Department of Transportation has revealed that they may not be able to pay contractors (who are working on over 700 infrastructure projects) after July 1st if the state doesn’t pass a budget.
To top it all off, the state’s credit rating is one step away from junk status, the lowest of any state. Illinois may become the first state to declare bankruptcy since the Great Depression.
Governor Bruce Rauner has gone so far as to call his state a “banana republic.”
The state’s comptroller has admitted that “We are in massive crisis mode.”
And a reporter for the Chicago Tribune thinks Illinois has gone so far past the point of no return, that the state should be broken up. He recently wrote what basically sounds like a suicide note for Illinois.
We just disappear. With no pain. That’s right. You heard me.
The best thing to do is to break Illinois into pieces right now. Just wipe us off the map. Cut us out of America’s heartland and let neighboring states carve us up and take the best chunks for themselves.
The group that will scream the loudest is the state’s political class, who did this to us, and the big bond creditors, who are whispering talk of bankruptcy and asset forfeiture to save their own skins.
But our beloved Illinois has proved that it just doesn’t deserve to survive.
So how did it get to this point?
The root of the problem is Illinois’ unfunded pension liabilities, which amount to $130 billion. The state’s leaders simply promised what could not be delivered.
Most of their employees can retire in their 50’s, and many of them will receive 1-2 million dollars over the course of their retirements.
As debts associated with pensions reached astronomical levels, government increased taxes so much that many of the wealthiest and most productive citizens and businesses moved away, leaving an even smaller tax base to draw from.
In short, Illinois is in a death spiral, but it’s not alone. Illinois is merely the canary in the coal mine.
We’re only hearing about Illinois right now because the percentage of their pensions that have been funded is the lowest in the nation. However, there are plenty of states that aren’t too far behind Illinois.
Oklahoma shows 72.8 percent of pension obligations funded ranking 23rd in the nation and a per capita income of $43,637 which ranks nationally at 27th.
There are plenty of states with a higher debt to GDP ratio, and more debt per person. Oklahoma is listed with a total state debt of $9,047,456,000 and a per person state debt of $2,411,79 as of 2014. This information comes from the United States Census Bureau and a report produced by State Budget Solutions (SBS) focusing on state and local government budgets.
And it’s not just public pensions. The pension funds for every company in the the S&P 500 are underfunded by $375 billion. Before the last financial crisis, they were fully funded.
Union Workers at the American Airlines Maintenance Base in Tulsa are grousing about astronomical management salaries while pensions remain unfunded contrary to contract.
Globally, the problem is far worse. 20 countries in the OECD, whose members include every western and developed nation, have a combined $78 trillion in unfunded liabilities, from both private and public pensions.
During the economic crash of 2008, we all saw how contagious an economic calamity could be. A crash in one market can put many others over the edge, and cause them to crash as well. What started with a subprime mortgage crisis in the United States, quickly turned into a global economic crash that we still haven’t truly recovered from.
So when Illinois does crash and burn as a result of their pension funds (and it is a matter of when, not if), then it’s time to buckle up. It could be the beginning of a global financial unraveling.
Good news is also possible as President Donald Trump's elimination of Federal financial irresponsibility, treasonous trade deals and bogus gifting of trillions in tax dollars to terrorists by President Barack Hussein Obama are reversed.
Maybe - just maybe - free enterprise can pull us back from the brink of irresponsible socialist ruin. If not, look and learn today from Venezuela.
(Courtesy of: SHTF.com)