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Is the Economy Headed for a Depression?
University of Maryland - Robert H. Smith School of Business ^ | December 05, 2008 | Professor Peter Morici

Posted on 12/05/2008 9:29:14 AM PST by mr_hammer

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To: ninonitti; All

California may be out of cash in February
Jim Christie – Fri Dec 5, 2:26 pm ET

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – California is on track to run out of cash in February or March and faces a $15 billion cash shortage by the end of its fiscal year in June unless officials plug an $11.2 billion budget gap, according to the state’s budget director.

Additionally, if Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and lawmakers fail to close the current fiscal year’s budget shortfall soon, California, the most populous U.S. state, may in March delay payments to its vendors or hand them notes promising payment, according to a December 1 letter to top lawmakers from the director of the Department of Finance, Michael Genest.

A copy of the letter was obtained on Friday by Reuters.

“Specifically, it now appears certain that available cash reserves from all sources will fall below the cash cushion target of $2.5 billion in February and that the state will begin delaying payments or paying in registered warrants in March,” Genest said in his letter.

“To reduce this threat, the administration is also proposing legislation to increase internal borrowable cash resources,” Genest added. “However, even with this cash solution the state will not be able to pay all of its bills in the absence of quick action on the budgetary solutions.”

The last time California, the world’s eighth biggest economy and the largest issuer of U.S. public debt, issued payment promises to vendors was in the early 1990s.

“We’re going to be very slim in February and absent any action we go into a negative cash balance in March and that means clearly we’re not going to be able to pay all of our bills,” said H.D. Palmer, Schwarzenegger’s spokesman on state finances. “We need to take very real action to address the immediate crisis ... We’re in extraordinary fiscal circumstances.”

Legislative leaders were not immediately available for comment on Genest’s letter, which came on the heels of Schwarzenegger calling lawmakers into a special session to close the budget shortfall.

The state’s revenues have been weakening more than expected, reduced by a lengthy housing slump, sagging retail sales, turmoil in financial markets and rising unemployment.

Schwarzenegger, a Republican, is urging the Democrat-led legislature to back his plan for closing the budget shortfall with a combination of spending cuts and new revenues, including cash from raising the state’s sales tax.

Democrats oppose spending cuts and the legislature’s Republican minority opposes tax increases, resulting in routine stalemates on spending plans.

Those delays and budgets often tipping into deficit are major reasons why California’s general obligation debt rating is paired with Louisiana’s at the bottom of Wall Street’s state rankings. Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings currently have ‘A+’ ratings on the debt, while Moody’s Investors Service has an ‘A1’ rating on the bonds.

Investors are growing increasingly concerned about the state’s finances. Spreads between California general obligation debt and the benchmark triple-A curve for 20- and 30-year maturities are at their highest level of the decade, topping even those when California’s GO debt rating fell to ‘BBB’ in 2003, according to Muni Market Data, a service of Thomson Reuters.

(Reporting by Jim Christie, Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)


81 posted on 12/05/2008 4:12:41 PM PST by Leisler ("Give us the child for 8 years and it will be a Bolshevik forever. " Lenin)
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To: mr_hammer

What if they gave a Depression, and nobody came?


82 posted on 12/05/2008 9:03:57 PM PST by SuziQ
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To: Leisler

OOOPPPS make that Callyfourna

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/582d470c-c307-11dd-a5ae-000077b07658.html


83 posted on 12/06/2008 6:09:16 AM PST by ninonitti
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To: Grim

Just got to your Karl Denninger link. I took economics and learned about the cycle and think that letting the economy have a small recession early on and clearing the bad debts is the healthest way, but death for politics, In politics, elections and news, they always must be doing something, holding on to bad debt prolonging the recession but making it bigger.

Republicans cry must be “THERE IS NO MONEY” left as Fred Thompson put it. We have to fight democrats AND establishment republicans.


84 posted on 12/06/2008 6:43:18 PM PST by sickoflibs (Obama says: "I only need to buy 40% of voters with handouts and trick another 11%")
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