Saving Illinois:
Getting More Bang for the State's Bucks
By Ellen Brown
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July
25, 2017
|
|
|
|
|
|
Illinois is teetering on bankruptcy and other states are not far
behind, largely due to unfunded pension liabilities; but there are
solutions. The Federal Reserve could do a round of “QE for Munis.” Or
the state could turn its sizable pension fund into a self-sustaining
public bank.
Illinois is insolvent, unable to pay its bills.
According to Moody’s, the state has $15 billion in unpaid bills and
$251 billion in unfunded liabilities. Of these, $119 billion are tied to
shortfalls in the state’s pension program. On July 6, 2017, for the
first time in two years, the state finally
passed a budget, after lawmakers overrode the governor’s veto on
raising taxes. But they used
massive tax hikes to do it – a 32% increase in state income taxes
and 33% increase in state corporate taxes – and still Illinois’ new
budget generates only $5 billion, not nearly enough to cover its $15
billion deficit.
Adding to its budget woes, the state is being
considered by Moody’s for a credit downgrade, which means its borrowing
costs could shoot up. Several other states are in nearly as bad shape,
with Kentucky, New Jersey, Arizona and Connecticut topping the list.
U.S. public pensions are underfunded by at least $1.8 trillion and
probably more, according to expert estimates. They are paying out more
than they are taking in, and they are falling short on their projected
returns. Most funds aim for about a 7.5% return, but they
barely made 1.5% last year.
If Illinois were a corporation,
it could declare bankruptcy; but states are constitutionally forbidden
to take that route. The state could follow the lead of Detroit and cut
its public pension funds, but Illinois has a constitutional provision
forbidding that as well. It could follow Detroit in privatizing public
utilities (notably water), but that would drive consumer utility prices
through the roof. And taxes have been raised about as far as the
legislature can be pushed to go.
The state cannot meet its budget because the tax base has shrunk. The
economy has shrunk and so has the money supply, triggered by the 2008
banking crisis. Jobs were lost, homes were foreclosed on, and businesses
and people quit borrowing, either because they were “all borrowed up”
and could not go further into debt or, in the case of businesses,
because they did not have sufficient customer demand to warrant business
expansion. And today, virtually the entire circulating money supply is
created when banks make loans When loans are paid down and new loans
are not taken out, the money supply shrinks. What to do?
Quantitative Easing for Munis
There is a deep pocket that can fill the hole in the money supply –
the Federal Reserve. The Fed had no problem finding the money to bail
out the profligate Wall Street banks following the banking crisis, with
short-term loans
totaling $26 trillion. It also freed up the banks’ balance sheets by
buying $1.7 trillion in mortgage-backed securities with its
“quantitative easing” tool. The Fed could do something similar for the
local governments that were victims of the crisis. One of its dual
mandates is to maintain full employment, and we are nowhere near that
now, despite some biased figures that omit those who have dropped out of
the workforce or have had to take low-paying or part-time jobs.
The
case for a “QE-Muni” was made in an October 2012 editorial in The New
York Times titled “Getting
More Bang for the Fed’s Buck” by Joseph Grundfest et al. The authors
said Republicans and Democrats alike have been decrying the failure to
stimulate the economy through needed infrastructure improvements, but
shrinking tax revenues and limited debt service capacity have tied the
hands of state and local governments. They observed:
State and
municipal bonds help finance new infrastructure projects like roads and
bridges, as well as pay for some government salaries and services.
. . . [E]very Fed dollar spent in the muni market would absorb a larger
percentage of outstanding debt and is likely to have a greater effect on
reducing the bonds’ interest rates than the same expenditure in the
mortgage market.
. . . [L]owering the borrowing costs for
states, cities and counties should not only forestall tax increases
(which dampen individual spending), but also make it easier for local
governments to pay for police officers, firefighters, teachers and
infrastructure improvements.
The authors acknowledged that their
QE-Muni proposal faced legal hurdles. The Federal Reserve Act prohibits
the central bank from purchasing municipal government debt with a
maturity of more than six months, and the beneficial effects expected
from QE-Muni would require loans of longer duration. But Congress was
then trying to avoid the “fiscal cliff,” so all options were on the
table. Today the fiscal cliff has come around again, with threats of the
debt ceiling dropping on an embattled Congress. It could be time to look
at “QE for Munis” again.
Getting More Bang for the
Pensioners’ Bucks
Scott Baker, a senior advisor to the
Public Banking Institute and economics editor at OpEdNews,
has another idea. He argues that the states are far from broke. They
may not be able to balance their budgets with taxes, but a search
through their Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs) shows that
they have massive surplus funds and rainy day funds tucked away around
the state, most of them earning minimal returns. (Recall the 1.5% made
by the pension funds collectively last year.)
The 2016 CAFR
for Illinois shows $94.6 billion in its pension fund alone, and well
over $100 billion if other funds are included. To say it is broke is
like saying a retired couple with a million dollars in savings is broke
because they can earn only 1.5% on their savings and cannot live on
$15,000 a year. What they need to do is to spend some of their savings
to meet their budget and invest the rest in something safe but more
lucrative.
So here is Baker’s idea for Illinois:
1. Make an iron-clad pledge by law, even in the State Constitution
if they can get quick agreement, to provide for pension payouts at the
current level and adjusted for inflation in the future.
2.
Liquidate the current pension fund and maybe some of the other liquid
funds too to pay off all current debts.
3. This will leave them
with a great credit rating . . . .
4. Put the remaining tens of
billions into a new State Bank, partnering with the beleaguered small
and community banks . . . . Use that money to finance state and local
businesses and individuals instead of Wall Street schemes and high fund
manager fees that will no longer be necessary or advisable, saving the
state hundreds of millions a year.
The Public Bank could be built
roughly on the model of the hugely successful Bank of North Dakota
example, one of the country's greatest banks, measured by Return on
Equity, and scandal-free since its founding in 1919.
The Bank
of North Dakota (BND), the nation’s only state-owned bank, has had
record profits every year for the last 13 years, with
a return on equity in 2016 of 16.6%, twice the national average. Its
chief depositor is the state itself, and its mandate is to support the
local economy, partnering rather than competing with local banks. Its
commercial loans range from 2.4%
to 7.5%. The BND makes cheaper loans as well, drawing on loan funds for
special programs including infrastructure, startup businesses and
affordable housing. Its loan income after deducting allowances for loan
losses was $175 million in 2016 on a loan portfolio of $4.7 billion. (2016
BND CAFR, pages 28-29.)That puts the net return on loans at 3.7%.
Illinois could follow North Dakota’s lead. Looking again at the
Illinois CAFR (page 45), the amount paid out for pension benefits in
2016 was only $1.833 billion, or less than 2% of the $94.6 billion pool.
An Illinois state bank could generate that much in profit, even after
paying off the state’s outstanding budget deficit.
Assume
Illinois guaranteed its pension payouts, as Baker recommends, then
liquidated its pension fund and withdrew $10 billion to meet its current
budget shortfall. This would significantly improve its credit rating,
allowing it to refinance its long-term debt at a reduced rate. The
remaining $85 billion could be put into the state’s own bank, $8 billion
as capital and $77 billion as deposits. [See chart below.] At a loan to
deposit ratio of 80%, $60 billion could be issued in loans. At a return
similar to the BND’s 3.7%, these loans would produce $2.2 billion in
interest income. The remaining $17 billion in deposits could be invested
in liquid federal securities at 1%, generating an additional $170
million. That would give a net profit of $2.37 billion, enough to cover
the $1.8 billion annual pensioners’ payout, with $570 million to spare.
The salubrious result: the pension fund would be self-funding;
the state would have a bank that could create credit to support the
local economy; the pensioners would have money to spend, increasing
demand; the economy would be stimulated, increasing the tax base; and
the state would have a good credit rating, allowing it to borrow on the
bond market at low interest rates. Better yet, it could borrow from its
own bank and pay the interest to itself. The proceeds could then go to
its pensioners rather than to bondholders.
Where there is the
political will, there is a way. Politicians and central bankers will
take radical, game-changing steps in desperate times. We just need to
start thinking outside the box, a Wall Street-imposed box that has
trapped us in austerity and economic servitude for over a century.
Self-funding of Illinois Pensions
State Pension Fund: $95B
Pay off existing debt with $10B, leaving $85B
Establish State Bank with $85B ($77B deposits + $8B capital)
The $77B can be used to:
• Make $60B loans earning
3.7%, yielding $2.2B/year
• Buy $17B in US bonds at 1%,
yielding $170M/year
Total – $2.37B, which can be used to:
• Pay pension needs ($1.8B)
• Cover bank expenses (perhaps
$100M)
• Leaving $300M for
miscellaneous/profit
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public
Banking Institute, a Senior Fellow of the Democracy
Collaborative, and author of twelve books including Web
of Debt and The Public Bank
Solution. A 13th book titled The Coming Revolution in Banking is due
out this fall. She also co-hosts a radio program on PRN.FM called “It’s
Our Money.” Her 300+ blog articles are posted at EllenBrown.com.
***
Share the link of this article with your facebook friends