Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Paycheck To Paycheck

The Governator keeps juggling the numbers in order to keep California solvent, and the state is now down to playing shell games with monthly payments to school districts to try to avoid defaulting.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, California's state controller and treasurer, decided Monday to delay $2.9 billion a month in payments to school districts and counties sooner than expected so the state can meet debt and pension obligations.

The leaders issued a joint letter notifying state lawmakers of their decision to begin withholding the payments in September instead of October.

The move reflected the limited resources the state has to work with as the impasse over California's $19 billion budget shortfall has dragged on for nearly two months. 

Controller John Chiang has warned that the state could again issue IOUs, perhaps as soon as the end of August. 

The Legislature gave authority in February to the three officers to delay $2.5 billion a month in payments to schools and $400 million in monthly payments to counties during October, November and December to help manage cash flow. 

The step came on top of a July deferral of $2.5 billion for schools and $700 million for counties. 
Can't even afford to pay for schools from month to month, and IOUs will almost certainly be back soon.  At what point do we admit California's a third-world failed state?  What happens when the state eventually defaults?

How bad will the damage be?  We're going to find out rather quickly.

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