Illinois is broke.
Democrats of course want to raise taxes to cover the financial hole, but
that’s just been tried and didn’t work. Illinois
just had a portion of a temporary income tax hike expire. Illinois has a flat income tax, and the
increase was from 3% to 5% for individuals, a 66% hike, that ran for three or
four years. Despite bringing in a ton of
additional cash, and despite the bulk of that cash going to state pension funds
(I have read as much as 90%), at the end of the period of the tax hike I have
read that the pension shortfall is
greater than it was before the tax hike, meaning that the pension deficit
is increasing faster than the additional money raised via the tax hike. The temporary hike was supposed to make
things much better, but it did not.
The tax rate for individuals has now dropped to 3.75%, which
is still higher than the 3% it was a few years ago. The state is in, as the saying goes, deep doo
doo, and of course some local units of government like the City of Chicago and
the Chicago Public School System may be in even worse shape.
Some argue that the problem started with a "rich"
and ultimately unaffordable formula for determining the amount of pension,
aggravated by a fair amount of Illinois-style corruption such as double and
triple dipping, pension spiking, and adding many non-governmental union employees
to the pension system. The
unaffordability was hidden for years by financial legerdemain, while some of
the money that should have been put to the pension fund was spent elsewhere to
make the politicians look better at the moment to their constituencies. Here's one old clipping I have related to the
mess: "From 1998 through 2008,
despite revenue that has gone up by many billions, [Illinois] spending has
skyrocketed: per capita state expenditures after inflation have climbed almost
47% while the state population has grown only 4%." At some point the financial chicanery could
not be hidden anymore, even from the accounting firms.
Most state politicians have resisted real reform such as
moving government employees off a defined benefit plan to a defined
contribution plan, the kind almost all private businesses have today. For them, "Illinois ain't ready for
reform," to borrow a phrase.
The total state and local tax burden in Illinois is on the
high side as states go, and I have read the highest among the surrounding (and
competing) states. Although the income
tax may be relatively low (although some states have none), local property
taxes and sales taxes are relatively high.
The process some high-tax and functionally-bankrupt states
are beginning to experience is conceptually similar to the downward death
spiral of an old health insurance plan when, through bad underwriting and
pricing, its prices become too high to attract healthy customers and at the
same time drive away healthy current enrollees, leaving behind the costly sick
ones as an ever increasing percentage of covered lives. Of course, the implications, intermediate- to
long-term, for the municipal bond market are the dark clouds on the horizon. In some places like Detroit, they have
already blown in.
Truly and honestly fixing this problem without changing
spending would require a massive tax hike, one that would substantially harm
the competitiveness of the state, whose economic growth may already be behind
such neighbors as Wisconsin and Indiana, and one that would cause I think most
tax-paying retirees and many businesses to flee the state. One tough alternative so crazy it just might
work: truly and substantially cutting
state spending. But that would mean
cutting spending to the core base of the Democrat Party – government workers
and welfare recipients, which is not likely to happen.
So the state slowly slouches toward bankruptcy, while tax-paying retirees and business owners set their sights on Indiana, Tennessee, or Florida. Many have already left, and many more are sure to follow. Illinois' financial death spiral may have already begun.
Yeats comes easily to mind:
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
[….]
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
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