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10 more USA States' Govt bankrupted after California

obama.bin.laden

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http://news.xinhuanet.com/world/2009-11/13/content_12446272.htm

美国十州财政告急
2009年11月13日 08:28:03  来源:新华网
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美国亚利桑那州财政吃紧,致使州议员考虑抵押议会大楼。密歇根州出现美国最高失业率,迫使州政府官员削减教育和医疗支出。

美国皮尤研究中心11日发布的报告显示,政府财政困难已不再局限于加利福尼亚州,另外至少9个州正滑向财政危机。与此同时,这些州政府提高税率、裁减更多员工和减少公共服务的可能性也在增加。

  十州告急

总部位于华盛顿的皮尤研究中心研究了7月31日前美国全部50个州的税收、预算和失业率等数据。

报告发现,亚利桑那州、佛罗里达州、伊利诺伊州、密歇根州、内华达州、新泽西州、俄勒冈州、罗德岛州和威斯康星州财政状况危急程度不亚于加州。这些州预算赤字庞大,失业率飙升,抵押房产赎回权丧失率高企。

“尽管加州经常吸引媒体眼球,但其他州面临的(财政)困难同样骇人,”皮尤研究中心常务董事苏珊·乌拉恩说,“这些州为摆脱衰退而采取的政策将在相当大程度上决定整个国家复苏速度。”

报告呼吁这十个州的议员和州长迅速行动,避免财政危机爆发。这十个州人口和经济总量占全美三分之一以上。

加州重灾

报告给各个州分别打分,其中新泽西和伊利诺伊为C减,加利福尼亚和罗德岛则是D加。

报告说,加州财政管理混乱,是财政状况最糟的州之一。据加州议会分析局提供的数字,加州借助削减教育和公共服务资金、临时增税和打白条等手段调整预算将近600亿美元。



不过,其中一些预算调整预计不会持续。加州临时增税措施将于2010年年底到期。

加州州长阿诺德·施瓦辛格预计,他明年1月公开下一份财政支出计划时,政府财政赤字将达124亿美元至144亿美元。

施瓦辛格警告,更为苛刻的预算收缩还在前方。“我们还没摆脱危险,”他本周说。

  各有苦衷

在调查上述十州财政困难原因时,报告发现,这些州要么产业单一,要么有预算赤字传统,要么在寻求增税等改变时面临法律约束。一些州的议会需要绝大多数赞成票才能通过增税法案和预算案。

作为汽车业重镇底特律所在地,密歇根在通用汽车公司和克莱斯勒汽车公司先后申请破产保护、州政府向联邦政府伸手要钱的情况下继续税收优惠政策。

伊利诺伊自2001年起就每年背负财政赤字,下一财政年度赤字又将达117亿美元。

加州议会眼下正面临以超过三分之二赞成票通过预算案和增税法案的压力。(卜晓明)
 

obama.bin.laden

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http://www.news4jax.com/nationalnews/21585214/detail.html

Report: 10 States Face Financial Peril
Budget Disaster Could Mean Higher Taxes, Gov't Layoffs, Crowded Classrooms
JUDY LIN, Associated Press Writer

POSTED: Wednesday, November 11, 2009
UPDATED: 8:40 am EST November 12, 2009
wait 2 secs to reload the image
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- In Arizona, the budget has grown so gloomy that lawmakers are considering mortgaging Capitol buildings. In Michigan, state officials dealing with the nation's highest unemployment rate are slashing spending on schools and health care.

Drastic financial remedies are no longer limited to California, where a historic budget crisis earlier this year grew so bad that state agencies issued IOUs to pay bills.

A study released Wednesday warned that at least nine other big states are also barreling toward economic disaster, raising the likelihood of higher taxes, more government layoffs and deep cuts in services.

The report by the Pew Center on the States found that Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island and Wisconsin are also at grave risk, although Wisconsin officials disputed the findings. Double-digit budget gaps, rising unemployment, high foreclosure rates and built-in budget constraints are the key reasons.

"While California often takes the spotlight, other states are facing hardships just as daunting," said Susan Urahn, managing director of the Washington, D.C.-based center. "Decisions these states make as they try to navigate the recession will play a role in how quickly the entire nation recovers."

The analysis, "Beyond California: States in Fiscal Peril," urged lawmakers and governors in those states to take quick action to head off a wider catastrophe. The 10 states account for more than one-third of the nation's population and economic output, according to the report.

Historically, states have their worst tax revenue year soon after a national recession ends. At the same time, higher joblessness and underemployment mean more people need government-sponsored health care and social safety-net programs, further taxing state services.

California leads the most vulnerable states identified by the report, which describes it as having poor money-management practices. Since February, California has made nearly $60 billion in budget adjustments in the form of cuts to education and social service programs, temporary tax hikes, one-time gimmicks and stimulus spending, according to the Legislative Analyst's Office.

Many of those fixes are not expected to last. The state's temporary tax increases will begin to expire at the end of 2010, while federal stimulus spending will begin to run out a year after that.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger estimates California will run a deficit of $12.4 billion to $14.4 billion when he releases his next spending plan in January. The governor warned that the toughest cuts are ahead.

"I think that we are not out of the woods yet," Schwarzenegger said this week.

At the same time, the Legislature is hamstrung by requirements that budget bills and tax increases be passed with a two-thirds majority, a mandate that the report labeled "a recipe for gridlock."

The Pew report was based on data available as of July 31 and scored all 50 states based on revenue changes, unemployment, foreclosures and budget requirements. It also gave them grades. California and Rhode Island scored worst with D-pluses, then New Jersey and Illinois with C-minuses.

In reviewing why some states are suffering more than others, Pew found that the 10 states tend to rely heavily on one type of industry, have a history of persistent budget shortfalls or face legal constraints making it extra difficult to implement major changes, such as tax increases.

Many require a supermajority vote for passing tax increases or budget bills.

Wisconsin officials issued a statement late Wednesday saying the Pew report was inaccurate. Wisconsin Department of Administration Secretary Michael Morgan said the state has balanced its budget by cutting spending and raising revenue. It projects a $270 million budget surplus for the period ending July 1, 2011, Morgan said in his statement.

Several state legislatures have been unable to enact long-term fixes. Instead, they asked voters or governors to make the call, or used accounting gimmicks to put off the hard choices until later.

For example:

-- Arizona lawmakers relied on one-time fixes to balance recent budgets as the state's home foreclosure rate surpassed California's and the nationwide average. Among the many ideas being explored by the state are a plan to mortgage state buildings, then rent the property until the state regains ownership at the end of the contract.

-- Michigan, where two of the Detroit Three automakers filed for bankruptcy protection this year, continues to offer tax incentives even as they take a toll on the state's pocketbook, leading to declining tax revenue. According to the Pew study, Michigan offered $6.3 billion more in total tax exemptions, credits and deductions than it actually collected in taxes in 2008.

-- Illinois, which has run deficits every year since 2001, is facing an $11.7 billion budget gap for its next fiscal year, beginning in July, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Pew's Government Performance Project ranked Illinois behind only California and Rhode Island for its lack of fiscal management on paying medical bills and pension liabilities.

-- With Florida facing a shrinking population for the first time since World War II, Republican Gov. Charlie Crist and the GOP-controlled Legislature balanced a $5.9 billion shortfall with cuts, federal stimulus money and tax hikes, including a $1-a-pack tax increase on cigarettes. But the future remains uncertain.

"Florida continues to face the same challenges as last year, including a very austere budgetary environment," said Rep. David Rivera, a Miami Republican who chairs both of the Florida House's two appropriations councils.

___

Associated Press writers Bill Kaczor in Tallahassee, Fla., and Paul Davenport in Phoenix contributed to this report.

___

On the Web:

Pew Center on the States, http://www.pewcenteronthestates.org/

Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

obama.bin.laden

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http://www.kfvs12.com/global/story.asp?s=11486462

Report: Illinois among 10 states facing financial disaster

Associated Press - November 11, 2009 1:14 PM ET

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - California's ongoing fiscal crisis has attracted national attention, but a study warns that nine other states are barreling toward similar economic disaster.

A report released Wednesday by the Pew Center on the States says Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island and Wisconsin also are at risk of fiscal calamity.

That could mean higher taxes, more layoffs of government employees, increasingly crowded classrooms and fewer services in states that account for more than one-third of America's population and economic output.

Most of the states face rising unemployment and high home foreclosure rates, and their revenues have dropped by double-digit percentages.

The analysis urges lawmakers and governors to take quick action to prevent economic catastrophe.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 

obama.bin.laden

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http://www.chicagobreakingnews.com/2009/11/report-illinois-9-more-states-face-budget-disasters.html


Report: Illinois, 9 more states face budget disasters
November 11, 2009 10:45 PM | No Comments

In Arizona, the budget has grown so gloomy that lawmakers are considering mortgaging Capitol buildings. In Michigan, state officials dealing with the nation's highest unemployment rate are slashing spending on schools and health care.

Drastic financial remedies are no longer limited to California, where a historic budget crisis earlier this year grew so bad that state agencies issued IOUs to pay bills.

A study released Wednesday warned that Illinois and at least nine other big states are also barreling toward economic disaster, raising the likelihood of higher taxes, more government layoffs and deep cuts in services.

The report by the Pew Center on the States found that Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island and Wisconsin are also at grave risk, although Wisconsin officials disputed the findings. Double-digit budget gaps, rising unemployment, high foreclosure rates and built-in budget constraints are the key reasons.

"While California often takes the spotlight, other states are facing hardships just as daunting," said Susan Urahn, managing director of the Washington, D.C.-based center. "Decisions these states make as they try to navigate the recession will play a role in how quickly the entire nation recovers."

The analysis, "Beyond California: States in Fiscal Peril," urged lawmakers and governors in those states to take quick action to head off a wider catastrophe. The 10 states account for more than one-third of the nation's population and economic output, according to the report.

Historically, states have their worst tax revenue year soon after a national recession ends. At the same time, higher joblessness and underemployment mean more people need government-sponsored health care and social safety-net programs, further taxing state services.

California leads the most vulnerable states identified by the report, which describes it as having poor money-management practices. Since February, California has made nearly $60 billion in budget adjustments in the form of cuts to education and social service programs, temporary tax hikes, one-time gimmicks and stimulus spending, according to the Legislative Analyst's Office.

Many of those fixes are not expected to last. The state's temporary tax increases will begin to expire at the end of 2010, while federal stimulus spending will begin to run out a year after that.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger estimates California will run a deficit of $12.4 billion to $14.4 billion when he releases his next spending plan in January. The governor warned that the toughest cuts are ahead.

"I think that we are not out of the woods yet," Schwarzenegger said this week.

At the same time, the Legislature is hamstrung by requirements that budget bills and tax increases be passed with a two-thirds majority, a mandate that the report labeled "a recipe for gridlock."

The Pew report was based on data available as of July 31 and scored all 50 states based on revenue changes, unemployment, foreclosures and budget requirements. It also gave them grades. California and Rhode Island scored worst with D-pluses, then New Jersey and Illinois with C-minuses.

In reviewing why some states are suffering more than others, Pew found that the 10 states tend to rely heavily on one type of industry, have a history of persistent budget shortfalls or face legal constraints making it extra difficult to implement major changes, such as tax increases.

Many require a supermajority vote for passing tax increases or budget bills.

Wisconsin officials issued a statement late Wednesday saying the Pew report was inaccurate. Wisconsin Department of Administration Secretary Michael Morgan said the state has balanced its budget by cutting spending and raising revenue. It projects a $270 million budget surplus for the period ending July 1, 2011, Morgan said in his statement.

Several state legislatures have been unable to enact long-term fixes. Instead, they asked voters or governors to make the call, or used accounting gimmicks to put off the hard choices until later.

For example:

-- Arizona lawmakers relied on one-time fixes to balance recent budgets as the state's home foreclosure rate surpassed California's and the nationwide average. Among the many ideas being explored by the state are a plan to mortgage state buildings, then rent the property until the state regains ownership at the end of the contract.

-- Michigan, where two of the Detroit Three automakers filed for bankruptcy protection this year, continues to offer tax incentives even as they take a toll on the state's pocketbook, leading to declining tax revenue. According to the Pew study, Michigan offered $6.3 billion more in total tax exemptions, credits and deductions than it actually collected in taxes in 2008.

-- Illinois, which has run deficits every year since 2001, is facing an $11.7 billion budget gap for its next fiscal year, beginning in July, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Pew's Government Performance Project ranked Illinois behind only California and Rhode Island for its lack of fiscal management on paying medical bills and pension liabilities.

-- With Florida facing a shrinking population for the first time since World War II, Republican Gov. Charlie Crist and the GOP-controlled Legislature balanced a $5.9 billion shortfall with cuts, federal stimulus money and tax hikes, including a $1-a-pack tax increase on cigarettes. But the future remains uncertain.

"Florida continues to face the same challenges as last year, including a very austere budgetary environment," said Rep. David Rivera, a Miami Republican who chairs both of the Florida House's two appropriations councils.

--The Associated Press
 

obama.bin.laden

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This why Obama is here because he is looking to borrow from Ah Loong, not those Ah Loong of Geylang but the Ah Loong in Istana.

This is different, this Ah Loong will lend him a ton of $$$$, never need to return, and never spray paint O$P$. Because Singaporeans are SUCKERS!
 

tun_dr_m

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The REAL USA Economic Death JUST BEGAN.:eek:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091113/ap_on_bi_ge/us_obama_deficit

Obama eyes domestic spending freeze:(

By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press Writer Andrew Taylor, Associated Press Writer – Fri Nov 13, 2:53 pm ET

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration has alerted domestic agencies to plan for a freeze or even a 5 percent cut in their budgets, part of an election-year push to rein in record deficits that threaten the economy and Democrats' political prospects next fall.

China, the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury securities, has expressed concern about the size of U.S. deficits. U.S. policymakers worry that alarm over deficits could push foreigners into cutting back on their purchases of Treasury debt. President Barack Obama will visit China as part of his current tour of Asia.

White House budget director Peter Orszag said Friday that it is imperative to start curbing the flow of red ink in coming years so as not to erode the fledgling economic recovery and raise interest rates. But he called it a balancing act and said acting too fast could undercut the recovery.

Orszag wouldn't comment on the specifics of the upcoming budget, which will be unveiled in February, right after Obama's State on the Union address in which the initiative is sure to be a major focus.

Democratic officials in the White House and on Capitol Hill say options for locking in budget savings include caps on the amount of money Congress gets to distribute each year for agency operating budgets. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to frankly discuss internal deliberations.

"As part of that fiscal 2011 budget, we will be putting forward proposals that will put us back on a fiscally sustainable path and that have lower deficits," Orszag said in a recent Associated Press interview. "I'm not going to get into the mix between spending and revenues. Obviously deficit reduction requires some combination of those two."

On Thursday, the government reported that the federal deficit hit a record for October as the new budget year began. The Treasury Department said the deficit for October totaled $176.4 billion, even higher than the $150 billion imbalance that economists expected. The deficit for the 2009 budget year, which ended on Sept. 30, set an all-time record in dollar terms of $1.42 trillion. That was $958 billion above the 2008 deficit, the previous record holder.

The budget freeze was planned before Democratic setbacks in last week's elections. But the bad results for Democrats — independent voters that were central to Obama's winning coalition last year voted roughly 3 to 1 for GOP gubernatorial candidates in Virginia and New Jersey — appear to have added urgency to the deficit-cutting drive.

Independents, pollsters say, tend to be more concerned about the deficit than other voters and getting them back in the Democratic column is crucial to the party' chances in midterm congressional elections.

The mandate to domestic agencies to limit their budget requests for the 2011 budget year comes as an economic advisory board chaired by Paul Volcker is debating ways to reform the tax code. Virtually all budget experts say there will have to be revenue increases to make any significant dent in the deficit.

The White House edict to agencies to submit spending plans at least freezing their budgets is but one round in internal administration deliberations on the budget. Cabinet heads are sure to seek exemptions, and Orszag warned that firm budget decisions haven't been made.

Given Democrat's poor poll number on the deficit, cutting it may be a case in which the adage that good policy is good politics holds true.

Still, politicians have typically avoided politically painful deficit-cutting steps in election years and recent history has not been kind to politician who have tackled the issue.

Tax-raising deficit deals in 1990 and 1993 had big political consequences for President George H.W. Bush, who lost his re-election bid, and for President Bill Clinton, whose party lost control of Congress the following year.
 

neddy

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Asset
The country that should be worried is China. It will have no choice but to buy US$ to keep the lid on its artifically propped up currency exchange.
Why?
Because China and the rest of asia still need to help their export industry.

Like what USA said, the US$ is my currency but still your problem.

Prepare for high oil, food and utilies prices.



http://www.news4jax.com/nationalnews/21585214/detail.html

Report: 10 States Face Financial Peril
Budget Disaster Could Mean Higher Taxes, Gov't Layoffs, Crowded Classrooms
JUDY LIN, Associated Press Writer

POSTED: Wednesday, November 11, 2009
UPDATED: 8:40 am EST November 12, 2009
wait 2 secs to reload the image
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- In Arizona, the budget has grown so gloomy that lawmakers are considering mortgaging Capitol buildings. In Michigan, state officials dealing with the nation's highest unemployment rate are slashing spending on schools and health care.

Drastic financial remedies are no longer limited to California, where a historic budget crisis earlier this year grew so bad that state agencies issued IOUs to pay bills.

A study released Wednesday warned that at least nine other big states are also barreling toward economic disaster, raising the likelihood of higher taxes, more government layoffs and deep cuts in services.
 

flkyflky

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Loyal
The country that should be worried is China. It will have no choice but to buy US$ to keep the lid on its artifically propped up currency exchange.
Why?
Because China and the rest of asia still need to help their export industry.

Like what USA said, the US$ is my currency but still your problem.

Prepare for high oil, food and utilies prices.

Rubbish!

Today's US$ is in no position to compel large economies. The big boys are still insisting to have another new UN currency to kick USD out of the global playing field.

Everybody must dump USD, every form of normal trade can be done without USD these days.

US is the kernel source of the globe's worst economic and financial crisis, nothing more nothing less. People knows how to AVOID US totally and US will be in isolation very soon. With Obama doing the final Soviet stunt of Perestroika US will be finished very soon.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perestroika
 

hairylee

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USA had been in this situation before and they came out of it to be the dominant Super Power in the World.
 

COW flu

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USA had been in this situation before and they came out of it to be the dominant Super Power in the World.

NOPE! Sorry not this time, not any more. This time it is GAME OVER for USA. They had deferred their internal crisis for Too Long while Enlarging the eventual Blow-Out, this time it is the KO round. They will be down FLAT and stay down for 1 to 2 more generations.

It happened to UK before, they were the previous superpower until WW2. KO by WW2 and stayed down until now. 99% of their global territories and colonies are gone since after WW2. They had 2 to 3 centuries of glories which are all gone.

The US don't really have much colonies like UK, but what will be gone will be their military & tech dominance and all their properties and Wall Street bubbles & their brands e.g. GM Boeing HP IBM MS AIG/AIA McDonalds KFC... one by one bye bye sayonara, just like the British Colonies - gone with the winds.


:biggrin:
 
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