Tuesday 2 June 2009

California Leads Nation to Bond Default Abyss



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June 1 (Bloomberg) -- There is an old joke that a borrower dies if everyone
stops believing in him. A look at the history of financial crises suggests
there is a kernel of truth in this.

That’s why the California budget crisis may well lead to a second financial
calamity that would be far worse than anything experienced over the past 18
months.

California is, of course, facing a debacle. Voters rejected a series of
ballot initiatives designed to restore some sense of sanity to the state’s
budget. As a result, California is more than $21 billion in the hole.

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is struggling to find enough spending
reductions to close the gap, but investors are skeptical. According to Fitch
Ratings, which in March downgraded California’s general obligation bond
rating, California has the worst rating of any state.

Even amid economic calamity, the people of California are relatively
wealthy, and the state’s economy is an impressive engine. If California were
a country, it would have the eighth- largest economy on Earth. Given those
advantages, the notion that California might default on its government debt
might seem farfetched. After all, the reasoning goes, they can always raise
taxes to pay off debt. Even a gridlocked legislature might act if California
gets too close to the edge.

The problem with that line of thinking is that California’s politicians
might get little notice that desperate times are at hand. For some
borrowers, the first sign of problem is their inability to make an interest
payment. For others -- and here lies the nightmare scenario -- the problem
first becomes visible when all the lenders disappear.

Lenders’ Response

*Imagine, for example, that California returns to credit markets in the
coming months simply to roll over some of its expiring debt. Maybe the state
borrowed money from China for two years back in 2007 and now has to borrow
again to give the Chinese their money back. What happens if, seeing the
catastrophic budget situation, lenders decide to shun California altogether?

If that happens, California would have to default on its obligation to give
the Chinese their money back. It might do so by extending the terms of the
existing debt, but that would be, nonetheless, a default, and a run on
California debt surely could ensue.*

*Once a panic occurs, similar assets tend to be swept up in the wave. Bad
news spreads. Witness the run that occurred during the Asian financial
crisis of the late 1990s.

So if the unofficial eighth-largest economy fails on its debt, might the
debt for the largest economy go with it?*

Deficit and GDP

*A look at President Barack Obama’s budget suggests that the U.S.
government’s fiscal situation is in worse shape than California’s.*

The deficit relative to gross domestic product for the entire U.S. this year
is 12.9 percent, according to White House estimates released last month. If
California had the same deficit relative to its GDP, it would be short about
$230 billion -- 10 times the size of its current shortfall.

What’s worse, the Obama administration’s attitude toward economic policy
comes right out of the California playbook.

Notwithstanding White House claims that the federal deficit will drop to 8.5
percent of GDP next year, there is little cause to believe that the U.S.
faces a brighter future than California. That shouldn’t come as a surprise.

The Democrats have controlled the California legislature for most of the
past four decades. In spite of protestations by the occasional powerless
Republican governor, the Democrats adopted economic policies that define
left-wing nirvana.

Top Tax Rate

Roughly 40 percent of California’s income-tax revenue comes from the
much-harped-upon top 1 percent of earners. Thanks in part to the
“millionaire tax” approved by voters in 2004, California’s income-tax rate
has reached 10.55 percent on the highest earnings -- second only to Obama’s
native Hawaii, which taxes some income at 11 percent.

High tax rates on individuals, of course, hit many small businesses hard. If
you wonder why the California economy is going so much worse than most of
the country, this is a good place to start.

California has to answer for its treatment of corporations as well, socking
them with an income-tax rate that is just shy of 9 percent. Since the U.S.
federal rate is so high relative to our trading partners, *corporations that
operate in California face a combined local and federal tax rate higher than
that of any other country. *(Japan is a distant second.)

In case you wondered, California’s sales tax is high, too. Most places in
California, the combined city and state sales tax rate is more than 8
percent.

California is in crisis because state spending is so high that even those
hefty taxes aren’t enough to balance the budget.

California in D.C.

Except for the sales tax, the Obama administration’s plan is to copy
California’s policies.

Obama has proposed a massive tax increase on U.S. corporations by curbing
the deferral of taxes on corporate income earned abroad. He also has
advocated higher marginal tax rates on the rich, by letting George W. Bush’s
tax cuts expire.

Even with those tax hikes, Obama projects that deficits are here to stay
because, like California’s Democrats, Washington’s can’t resist increasing
government spending.

*It is easy to see how investors might stop believing in California. If they
do, it would be rational for the U.S. to be next*.

(Kevin Hassett, director of economic-policy studies at the American
Enterprise Institute, is a Bloomberg News columnist.