加州有 680 亿美元的预算赤字,但储备金仅为 300 亿美元
California Has A $68 Billion Budget Deficit With Only $30 Billion In Reserves

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/california-has-68-billion-budget-deficit-only-30-billion-reserves

为了应对加州财政紧张,州长加文·纽瑟姆最近根据一项显示州收入大幅下降的新预测调整了他的支出预测。 这一预测导致加州此前预计的 2022-23 财年预算盈余 975 亿美元减少至惊人的 225 亿美元预算赤字。 由于美国继续面临通货膨胀、利率上升和科技行业就业机会萎缩等重大经济动荡,加州目前预计 2023-24 财年的预算赤字将高达 680 亿美元。 为了应对这些迫在眉睫的数字,纽瑟姆州长提议在 2023-24 年实施 2,970 亿美元的预算,减少支出计划,同时间接借入大量资金来解决资金缺口。 无党派立法分析办公室最近的报告揭示了管理赤字的潜在解决方案; 其中包括利用现有的应急基金和缩减某些领域的支出。 尽管加州已做好充分准备,建立了数十亿美元的储备,但该州仍面临着每年总计约 300 亿美元的持续结构性赤字。 这些令人震惊的数字揭示了加州面临的严重预算影响,表明危机可能不会迫在眉睫,但它正在迅速逼近。 相反,佛罗里达州等邻近州目前享有健康的预算盈余,无需缴纳任何形式的个人所得税,也没有出现普遍的商业外逃或与高额债务相关的犯罪统计数据增加。

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原文

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

The boom-bust cycle in California is back to bust again. Governor Newsom faces some tough economic and political choices.

My, How Things Change

Jan 11, 2023: Cal Matters

As California’s state budget morphs from a $97.5 billion surplus to a multi-billion-dollar deficit, it’s another reminder about the volatility of the state’s revenue system.

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s penchant for braggadocio was in full flower eight months ago when he declared that California had a $97.5 billion budget surplus and boasted that “no other state in American history has ever experienced a surplus as large as this.”

A more subdued Newsom acknowledged that the projected surplus had morphed into a $22.5 billion shortfall. He proposed a $297 billion 2023-24 budget that throttles back some of the additional spending and indirectly borrows billions of dollars to close the gap.

Gotta love the borrowing to close the gap, idea. But why can’t we all borrow our way to to fiscal health?

December 7, 2023: Cal Matters

California’s Legislative Analyst’s Office projects a 2024-25 budget deficit twice as large as 2023-24. It says the state could dip into reserves and cut some one-time spending.

With tax revenues in a free fall comparable to the Great Recession and the dot-com bust, California faces a projected $68 billion budget deficit next year that will require spending cuts and reserve funds to close, state finance officials said today.

The new estimate from the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office, released as Gov. Gavin Newsom finalizes his January budget proposal, reflects a substantially delayed tax-filing period this fall where collections came in far below what lawmakers expected when they adopted a spending plan over the summer.

Legislative analyst Gabriel Petek cautioned that California is better prepared to respond to the situation than during the economic recession 15 years ago, because it has since built several multibillion-dollar rainy-day funds, though the state is also looking at a structural deficit of about $30 billion annually going forward.

I go with the word ‘serious.’ A serious budget problem,” Petek said during a briefing with journalists. “I would stop short of calling it a crisis.”

California’s Tax Revenue Falls

Politico reports California’s Budget Deficit Swells to Record $68B as Tax Revenue Falls

The latest deficit figure — calculated by the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office and released Thursday — far exceeds the $14.3 billion estimate from June. The shortfall, which is the highest in dollar terms but not as a percentage of overall spending, threatens to upend the upcoming legislative year by forcing Gov. Gavin Newsom and lawmakers to make spending cuts on a scale few term-limited elected officials in Sacramento have faced.

“The state remains in a good cash position, and that really wasn’t the case back at the start of the Great Recession,” Legislative Analyst Gabriel Petek told reporters. “We don’t face the same kind of liquidity challenges that we had at that time, and so I would stop short of describing it as a crisis.”

Newsom’s Department of Finance earlier this year warned California would continue to face a revenue downturn due to stock market declines, interest rate hikes and inflation.

A smaller deficit last year forced the governor to make the largest cuts of his tenure after years of massive surpluses. The state avoided deeper reductions by delaying spending and shifting money between the state’s general and special funds.

Did Democrats think near-zero interest rates would last forever, asks the Wall Street Journal. Do they think at all is a better question in my estimation.

The Legislative Analyst blames California’s plunging revenue on the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate increases, which it says have resulted in 80% fewer companies going public in 2022 and 2023 compared with 2021. “Home sales are down by about half, largely because the monthly mortgage to purchase a typical California home has gone from $3,500 to $5,400,” the analyst adds. Tech layoffs have also contributed to lower tax payroll withholding this year.

The real culprit for California’s budget shortfall, as ever, is its progressive tax system and how the politicians exploit it. The top 1% of taxpayers in California pay 50% of state income tax, and the top 0.1% pay a third. During the fat years, the state’s 13.3% top income-tax rate throws off enormous revenue that Sacramento proceeds to spend with new commitments that can’t easily be withdrawn when the lean years arrive.

Democrats don’t prepare for droughts because they assume they can always raise taxes on the wealthy when revenues dry up. That will be harder this time because so many of the wealthy have left the state.

Not a Crisis Yet

Don’t worry, it’s not a crisis yet. But it soon will be.

How long will $30 billion in reserves and budget shenanigans last when the deficit is $68 billion?

How long will the top 1 percent be willing to put up with paying 50 percent of the state income tax?

Newsom says the cutbacks will be “temporary”. Tax hikes are not temporary. Expect more of them.

By the way, Florida has a budget surplus, no state income tax, and it does not have huge smash and grab looting problem or a mass of businesses fleeing the state.

Meanwhile, at the Federal level the picture is even more dire.

When Does US Federal Debt Reach an Unsustainable Level?

An interesting article by Penn Wharton, University of Pennsylvania, says the limit of debt as a percentage of GDP is about 200 percent, When does that happen?

For discussion, please see When Does US Federal Debt Reach an Unsustainable Level?

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