By Harris Sherline | Thursday, December 10th, 2009 at 6:00 am
I recently received the following email from a friend:
Harris: Why is it, do you think, that the terrible financial situation in the County (Santa Barbara), the State, does not appear to be any matters of discussion? In both cases, they are a disaster waiting to happen. Is that the reason? The State Controller stated that the state could not borrow any more money last week. Where is the public comment, the concern? Nationally, the situation in CA is a frequent subject of discussion. Not here though. Is the national scene so over-powering? What is going on?
I believe the situation is due to a combination of a number of things (in no particular order):
1) A media that is staffed by journalists who have no economic training or understanding and does not do its job.
2) An abysmally poor education in our schools, especially about economics, coupled with an education establishment that has come to view capitalism and free enterprise as bad or evil.
3) Political Correctness, which has taken over our schools and the media.
4) A large percentage of the population is fat, dumb and happy and is generally uninformed and indifferent to anything that does not directly affect them.
5) A general feeling of helplessness, even among those who do pay attention and care, that they can’t do anything about the situation, with the result that people tune out bad news.
6) A corrupt political class at almost every level of government – who make a career of holding public office. They have structured the system to make it easy to get re-elected, which also makes them indifferent to the opinions of most of their constituents.
7) The pension system at all levels of government, county, state and federal, is a major cause of the problem of runaway budgets that are rapidly putting the nation into bankruptcy.
In California, the process of expanding government has reached the point that most of what happens in the state legislature is not well reported or reported at all, except for a few columnists like Dan Walters and Daniel Weintraub. Much like Congress, the sheer volume of bills that expand government regulation is impossible to track and finally intrude on public consciousness only after it’s too late to stop them.
Finally, any legislation that may be the least bit controversial is often hidden from view in an effort to slip it past the public before they can react and resist, or it is passed with an implementation date in the future, which generally goes unnoticed by the public until it is too late.
A good example is the California Global Warming Solutions Act, passed in 2006, which established a cap-and-trade program that will become effective January 1, 2012. It is the first U.S. statewide program to cap all GHG emissions from major industries and includes penalties for non-compliance, requiring emissions to be reduced to 1990 levels by 2020, a decrease of approximately 25%.
The consequences of this legislation are likely to be so severe that it will impact every business in the state and will probably force many of them to go out of business, in addition to dramatically raising the cost of doing business.
The larger question is what happens when government continues to spend money it doesn’t have?
Speaking to this issue, Dr. Marc Faber recently noted, “Eventually, I suppose a lot of governments will be bust, including the U.S…Nothing has been resolved, it’s just being postponed…The ultimate crisis will not just bankrupt the banking system and financial as happened in 2008, it will bankrupt governments.”
States (in the U.S.) don’t have the luxury of printing money, so their only recourse is to borrow. Californians have carried this to an extreme, approving billions of dollars of bond issues in recent years, without regard to the debt service that’s required to pay them off, generally over 30 or 40 years, roughly doubling the cost in the process.
Governments can and do go bankrupt, repudiating their obligations in the process. They fail to pay debt service on the bonds they may have issued or the value of their currency may depreciate to the point that it becomes worthless.
In California, the consequence of failing to meet its obligations timely or at all will cause panic, leaving bondholders in the lurch, without the income they thought they were buying and locked in without a viable market for resale, except at huge discounts.
It’s depressing, I know, but you asked.
© 2009 Harris R. Sherline, All Rights Reserved
Read more of Harris Sherline’s commentaries on his blog at www.opinionfest.com
Harris Sherline is the publisher and editor of Opinionfest. He is the owner and editor of The Wisdom of America's Elders, a resource website and forum for seniors. His articles also appear in the California Chronicle, GoPUSA, and the Santa Ynez Valley Journal.
|
Send a link: Tell a friend about this. Link to this post: Permalink Send us your link: Trackback link |
Filed under: California Global Warming solutions Act, Dr. Marc Faber, Government Accounting Office, government spending, media, pension system |
Leave a Reply
