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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (52344)6/28/2012 12:41:07 AM
From: Hope Praytochange3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
The Lessons Stockton Teaches

There are at least two lessons in the bankruptcy filing of Stockton, Calif., former boom town gone bust:

1. Don't give local government workers pay and perks that residents who pay for them can only dream of receiving in their private-sector jobs.

2. Keep local government out of economic development and redevelopment, which often are just forms of local central planning and corporate welfare that usually fail to achieve their goals.

Stockton is a northern California city of nearly 300,000, making it the largest in the nation to go bankrupt. Probably no one has more clearly described what's gone wrong there than City Manager Bob Deis.

"Stockton," Deis explained in an interview with Time magazine several months ago, "overcommitted to long-term obligations that even under the best of times the city could not afford."

Topping the list of overcommitted obligations are high wages and lavish retirement and health insurance benefits. Symptomatic of the problem is a 56-year-old city worker — no, make that retired city worker — quoted by Reuters in a news article on the Stockton bankruptcy.

She is just 56 years old and already retired. Where but in government do people in their 50s routinely get to retire ... and with taxpayer-funded health insurance? This Stockton retiree was worried the bankruptcy would force her to pay for her own health insurance, as the city's new 2012-2013 budget calls for eliminating retiree medical benefits.

Elimination of this perk years ago might have helped the city avoid bankruptcy and bond defaults.

Then there are economic development and redevelopment. Central economic planning failed in the Soviet Union, is failing in Cuba and is being abandoned in China. But all across California and the nation, local officials apparently believe in it by launching into development and redevelopment projects. It doesn't occur to them that if a project needs government backing, it probably will fail. The nation is still waiting for Amtrak to make its first profit.

Stockton has $700 million of debt, much of it to pay for various economic development and redevelopment projects. Go to the Stockton city government's economic development Web site and you'll read, "Economic development is one of Stockton's main focuses during this time when so many of Stockton's citizens are facing financial challenges."

You'll see the city has Enterprise Zone, Advantage Stockton, Brownfields and Financial Assistance for Businesses programs. You'll see a list of four separate redevelopment project areas, and you'll be able to find a list of completed projects. They include Stockton Arena, Stockton Ballpark, Downtown Marina and The Hotel Stockton. The millions of dollars of city loans and other subsidies have done nothing to keep the city out of bankruptcy.

Fortunately, people are waking up. Even people in government.

Nearly the first thing that Gov. Jerry Brown did on taking office in 2011 was to propose an end to the state's hundreds of redevelopment agencies to free up money for schools. Lawmakers passed a bill killing urban redevelopment districts, and Brown signed it one year ago.

Voters in San Diego and San Jose voted by overwhelming margins earlier this month to rein in their cities' retirement benefits. Stockton's bankruptcy shows why those people did the right thing . .. and why other cities should consider doing the same



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (52344)6/28/2012 12:42:40 AM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 71588
 
Barack Obama Too Much Like The Socialist Francois Hollande

Did the French just elect a self-described socialist who wants to raise taxes on the rich? Yes, they did.

Is President Obama asking for four more years with an economic philosophy similar to that of the new French president? Yes, he is.

In France, those earning over a million euros would face a tax rate of 75%. And one of Francois Hollande's first acts as new president of France was to reverse his predecessor's course and lower the retirement age from 62 to 60 — this in a country whose projected unfunded pension liabilities for its living citizens are about $8.37 trillion, or 300% of its $2.774 trillion gross domestic product.

The United States' unfunded Social Security, Medicare and prescription drug benefits liability for its living citizens is about $50 trillion, or 333% of our current $15 trillion GDP.

France is a country whose debt is 90% of its GDP (U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio is over 100%). It had zero GDP growth in the first quarter of 2012 and has an unemployment rate of 10.2%. Taxes, as a percent of GDP, are 56%. (U.S. state, local and federal tax take is 33% of GDP, excluding the dollar value of government-issued mandates on the private sector.)

France is a mess. Hollande, like Obama, pays no attention to the many examples of government-controlled economies versus those where government takes less from people and relies on the private sector to create jobs.

Let's look at just one such example. Hong Kong became a British colony following the first Opium War in the mid-1800s. As mainland China fell to communist control a century later, many Chinese migrants and corporations fled to the island. In 1961, Britain named Sir John Cowperthwaite, a proponent of the Austrian school of free-market economics, as financial secretary of Hong Kong.

Residents of Hong Kong faced a maximum 15% in personal taxes, no tariffs, no subsidies, no government borrowing and minimal red tape. Cowperthwaite called it "positive non-intervention."

Hong Kong, under his guidance, saw a 50% rise in wages and a two-thirds fall in the number of households in acute poverty. Exports rose by 14% a year, as Hong Kong evolved from a trading post to a major regional hub and manufacturing base. Hong Kong is a water-surrounded rock with no natural resources — other than the industry of its people.

In his first budget speech, Cowperthwaite said: "In the long run, the aggregate of decisions of individual businessmen, exercising individual judgment in a free economy, even if often mistaken, is less likely to do harm than the centralized decisions of a government, and certainly the harm is likely to be counteracted faster."

About Hong Kong, economist Milton Friedman wrote: "At the end of World War II, Hong Kong was a dirt-poor island with a per-capita income about one-quarter that of Britain's. By 1997, when sovereignty was transferred to China, its per-capita income was roughly equal to that of the departing colonial power. ... That was a striking demonstration of the productivity of freedom, of what people can do when they are left free to pursue their own interests."

In the U.S., we watch the spectacle of Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, explaining to Congress why his company lost $2 billion in private money. Meanwhile, the federal government squanders many times more by "investing" public money in now-bankrupt or soon-to-be bankrupt "green" companies.

After nearly four years of spending with dismal results, Obama blames the results on an "inherited" economy that was worse than he thought.

He also blames the dastardly Republicans for stopping him from spending the requisite amount of money to get things right.

Bill Clinton, too, pushed for a federal takeover of health care. In fact, everything ObamaCare purports to achieve HillaryCare set out to do. But when Clinton saw negative polls on HillaryCare and realized he overreached, he backed up.

Obama saw that parts of ObamaCare polled well, like refusing to allow rejection based on pre-existing illness and requiring insurance companies to cover the "children" of policyholders.

To keep the costs down, Obama called for an individual mandate, believing that to "bend the cost curve" he must require young, healthy types to get insurance or pay a fee for not doing so. Obama assumed that once people took a closer look at ObamaCare, resistance would fade. It hasn't. If anything, ObamaCare is more unpopular now than ever.

In France, not only did the voters elect a socialist, they gave him enough seats in parliament so that his agenda can get passed without compromise.

For two years, Obama had that kind of power. It gave us ObamaCare, "stimulus" and a tepid recovery.

Poor France.



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (52344)6/28/2012 12:43:56 AM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Respond to of 71588