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California defers budget deficit
The governor is due to sign off on the plan today, cutting
school and healthcare funding. But most of the red ink would
be pushed forward with accounting maneuvers and borrowing
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By Evan Halper
Los Angeles Times
February 16, 2008
SACRAMENTO -- The Legislature passed a package of emergency
budget measures Friday, which lawmakers touted as swift,
responsible bipartisan action that averts a cash crisis and
erases nearly half the state's $14.5-billion deficit.
But their move would not actually reduce spending on that
scale; rather, it would push most of the red ink forward with
accounting maneuvers and borrowing.
The lawmakers' measures would put taxpayers on the hook for
more debt and would, at best, allow the state to hobble
through the next few months, said budget experts outside the
Capitol. What are the legislators waiting for? some asked.
With the state in its worst financial shape in years, the
emergency actions amount to little more than nibbling around
the margins.
"Yet again, they are dodging and weaving and hoping . . .
they don't have to make any tough decisions," said
Christopher Thornberg, a partner at Beacon Economics, a
consulting and research firm in Los Angeles. "It is kind
of pathetic. At what point is someone going to say, 'We have a
problem and we have to deal with it'?"
Some of what lawmakers did would help close the state's budget
gap. But the savings would amount to only $2 billion over the
next year and a half. Most of the cuts made to achieve those
savings would affect schools and doctors who treat the poor.
Despite previous assertions by lawmakers and the governor that
they had cut up the state's credit cards for good, the package
approved Friday also included $3.3 billion in borrowing
authorized by voters years ago to deal with an earlier deficit
but never undertaken.
The difficulty of making even $2 billion in cuts partly
explains why lawmakers fell back on deferrals, delays,
transfers and other accounting shifts to keep the state
afloat.
The cuts, which the governor is expected to sign into law
today, mean that school districts would have to forgo $506
million that was given to them in the current year's budget, a
move lawmakers said would not affect classroom instruction,
though educators have disputed that. And reimbursement rates
for doctors who provide healthcare to the poor under the
state's Medi-Cal program would drop by 10%.
Some of the same legislators who have argued passionately in
favor of balancing the budget entirely through spending cuts
-- as opposed to tax hikes -- couldn't bring themselves to
vote for cutting subsidies to doctors.
"Today's action means doctors will simply stop seeing
[poor] patients," said Sen. Sam Aanestad (R-Grass
Valley), an anti-tax crusader who suggested that healthcare
cuts were disproportionately large.
A reduction measure that failed was aimed at buyers of yachts,
airplanes and luxury recreational vehicles. The state Senate
passed a bill to close a loophole that allows many of those
buyers to avoid paying sales tax by keeping their new vessels
out of state for 90 days.
Assembly Republicans, calling the measure a tax hike, blocked
it. Legislative budget analysts estimated that eliminating the
loophole would raise $26 million.
Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuņez (D-Los Angeles) called on
Republicans to join the effort to "close this 'sloophole'
once and for all." He said he would put the measure to
another vote in the Assembly early next week.
Most of this week's budget moves would not create lasting
savings. They involve either borrowing or doing such things as
delaying payments for various programs into the next budget
year. These actions may give the appearance that part of the
deficit has been eliminated, but the payments aren't canceled.
They are simply made later.
"A lot of this stuff is shell games," said Ryan
Ratcliff, an economist at the UCLA Anderson Forecast. "We
are just sort of pushing obligations around to create an
accounting statement that looks nice but does not really
change the reality of the deficit."
Ratcliff said lawmakers are exhibiting their usual reluctance
to take substantial action until after the governor releases
his revised budget plan in May. "We've got hard choices
to make, but it appears we are not going to make them
now," he said.
Delay could prove costly.
With the deficit so large, the Capitol's partisan divide so
deep and three of the Legislature's four leaders now lame
ducks, few in the capital expect an agreement on how to
eliminate the rest of the deficit by the July 1 deadline for
enacting a new budget.
If there is no budget deep into August, as occurred last year,
the state will be unable to sell billions of dollars in
short-term bonds that finance officials are planning to use to
keep from running out of money. Such bonds are routinely sold
to "even out" the state's cash flow; they provide
funds to cover the cost of programs early in the fiscal year
and are repaid when tax revenue surges in the spring.
But the bonds cannot be sold without a budget in place. The
alternative is a costly bridge loan from investment bankers.
State Treasurer Bill Lockyer warned in a letter to lawmakers
recently that such a move would probably be frowned on by
credit-rating agencies and could trigger a downgrade.
A downgrade would increase the amount of interest the state
must pay on its borrowing. Lockyer said that could cost
taxpayers as much as $128 million in fiscal 2008-09 and $319
million more the next year.
Taxpayers won't need to wait to assume more debt, however. The
$3.3 billion in borrowing in Friday's package would add two
years to the repayment schedule for the debt that voters
approved in 2004.
Schwarzenegger had promised never again to borrow to balance
the budget. But his administration argues that it is
appropriate for him to use what remains of the 2004 package.
Stephen Levy, director of the Center for Continuing Study of
the California Economy, in Palo Alto, said the $3.3 billion in
borrowing might have been justified as part of an overall plan
that included spending reductions and new revenues that would
close the budget gap.
"But so far they are using it just to kick the problem
down the road," he said.
evan.halper@latimes.com
Times staff writer Patrick McGreevy contributed to this
report.
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Phone: (760) 944-3564
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