January 30, 2012

Illinois Faces ‘Potentially Paralyzing’ $35 Billion Unpaid Bill Backlog

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:18 pm

By Tim Jones - Jan 30, 2012 9:01 AM CT

Illinois (STOIL1)’s unpaid bills may more than triple to $34.8 billion by 2017 unless lawmakers and Democratic Governor Pat Quinn immediately bring Medicaid and pension spending under control, said a research group.

The “potentially paralyzing” backlog, projected to reach $9.2 billion when this fiscal year ends June 30, would be fueled by an “unsustainable” increase in Medicaid spending, according to the Civic Federation, which calls itself a nonpartisan government research organization.

“Failure to address unsustainable trends in the state’s pension and Medicaid systems will only result in financial disaster for the state of Illinois,” Laurence Msall, president of the Civic Federation in Chicago, said in a press release today.

Illinois had its general-obligation bond rating reduced Jan. 6 by Moody’s Investors Service to A2 from A1, making it the company’s lowest-graded U.S. state. Moody’s revised its outlook because the state “took no steps to implement lasting solutions to its severe pension underfunding or to its chronic bill payment delays.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Tim Jones in Chicago at Tjones58@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Tannenbaum at mtannen@bloomberg.net

January 23, 2012

Dripping with red ink: Will anyone fix Illinois’ budget mess?

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 5:30 pm

BY BRIAN BRUEGGEMANN – News-Democrat

The question isn’t whether Illinois’ finances are in dreadful shape, it’s how to fix the problem. Or perhaps more accurately, will legislators have the political will to fix it when they return to Springfield for their spring session?

Even though the legislature and Gov. Pat Quinn last year imposed a temporary 67 percent state income tax increase, Quinn’s office expects to have a $500 million budget deficit this year.

Read more

November 17, 2011

Cadillac Pay in the Land of Lincoln

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 10:19 pm

By Andrew G. Biggs
Friday, November 4, 2011

 

Illinois public employees likely receive a significant pay premium over similar private sector workers.

Apparently, some quotes I provided for a news story on public sector pay in Illinois, where pay and benefits for government workers is a live political issue, have caused some concern there. I haven’t analyzed Illinois specifically–and as my study with Jason Richwine on Ohio pay shows, these things can get complicated–but my guesstimate to the reporter was that it’s very likely that Illinois public employees receive a pay premium over similar private sector workers.

Based on 2005-2010 data from the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey, Illinois state and local workers receive salaries around 5.8 percent below those of private sector workers with similar education and experience. A small salary penalty isn’t uncommon for state/local employees, although I’m told that Illinois workers have recently received pay increases that may not be fully represented in the CPS data. So it is highly possible that average salaries are around even.

But my main point was that public sector benefits are a lot more generous than those in the private sector. Let’s say you had an Illinois state employee who retired at age 65 with 30 years of service and a final salary of $60,000. His annual pension benefit would be around $29,160. For this, he contributed about 4 percent of his working salary, although I understand that in some cases the contribution is “picked up” by the employer. From 1992 to 2003, it seems that most Illinois state employees paid no pension contribution, and many still do not.

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November 4, 2011

Illinois’ Budget: From Worst to ‘Worster’

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 4:48 pm

By Steven Malanga

What could be worse in Illinois right now? It’s November and ‘Da Bears’ are barely above .500, while the hated Packers are undefeated and the Lions (the Lions?!) are positioning themselves for a playoff run.

Here’s what could be worse. Illinois’ state budget, filled with gimmicks, constructed for years on promises for which there were no revenues, and sustained by borrowing of the type that would make even a loan shark blush, is in serious meltdown mode. Less than a year after the state raised taxes by some $7 billion in the face of a fiscal crisis, legislators in Springfield, whose government qualifies as the fiscal bad-boy of states, have done little to address Illinois’ long-term spending and borrowing problems.

Even while the state’s vendors wait up to a year for money they are owed, Gov. Pat Quinn is making sure that favored insiders get paid. The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether Illinois exaggerated in bond offerings the savings it claims it will get from last year’s largely cosmetic pension reforms, which did little to fix the worst state pension problem in the country. And now the governor is actually proposing the state borrow even more, up to $5 billion, to clear up some of those back bills, which prompted an editorial from the Chicago Tribune under the simple headline: “No. More. Borrowing.”

Illinois is like the Bears after Walter Payton, the Bulls after Michael Jordan. Except that it’s been even longer since the state could claim it had a championship season. As Josh Barro showed in a City Journal article earlier this year, the state has long tried to deliver services without having the revenues to pay for them. It essentially wanted to be a low-tax (or at least a moderate-tax) state with high services and rich employee pensions. One result has been that the state hasn’t really balanced its budget for a long time. Instead, even during the national good times earlier this decade, Illinois used borrowing and gimmicks to create the appearance of fiscal propriety, though few people were fooled. As Indiana’s Gov. Mitch Daniels likes to say whenever he talks about his own state, it’s easy to look good when you have Illinois for a neighbor.

But late last year it seemed as if Illinois had finally reached the limit of its shenanigans. Investors balked at buying the state’s bonds except at a significant premium over what other states had to pay investors. CMA Datavision actually listed Illinois debt as one of the 10 biggest risks among governments in the world, along with places like Greece and Iraq. With borrowing problematic, state legislators panicked and enacted steep increases in personal income and business taxes in January, which have come to be known as the Quinncome taxes. The Chicago Tribune estimated that the tax increases take an extra week’s worth of earnings away from workers in the state and gives them to government. There, the money seems to be disappearing into that great celestial body known as the black hole of Springfield.

The problem is that little has changed in the state capital. Faced with a pension system that Joshua Rauh of Northwestern University’s Kellogg School estimates could become the first state retirement plan to run out of money, Illinois enacted extremely modest reforms last year that only apply to new hires and do little to shore up the system because the savings don’t kick in for years. Then, in classic Illinois style, the state claimed those future savings on this year’s budget in order to narrow its deficit.

One result of the failure to fix pensions is that the system’s costs are eating up tax revenues, including from the tax increase. The state’s annual pension contributions are up by $2 billion since 2008, while debt service from pension obligation bonds, which the state floated several times in the last decade to prop up the system, have increased by $1.14 billion, according to the Civic Federation of Chicago. In all, pension costs consume $5.8 billion, or more than 17 percent, of all Illinois general fund spending. Those costs will rise by $500 million next year and $2 billion in five years without reform.

The state has also continued to issue markers to people it owes. The Civic Federation recently estimated that Illinois’ backlog of unpaid bills financed out of its General Fund will grow to $5.5 billion this year. That state has an additional backlog of some $2.8 billion in business tax refunds and Medicaid and employee health insurance bills, for a whopping $8.3 billion in outstanding invoices.

Those business tax refunds the state is holding onto are especially rankling to firms. Imagine having your corporate tax rate boosted by nearly 50 percent to bail out your state, which then doesn’t bother using the money to pay you a refund you have coming. Meanwhile, the Chicago Sun-Times reported recently that Gov. Quinn intervened to ensure that a well-connected Illinois Democrat and his lawyers received a timely $285,000 payment they had coming from the state.

There are many titles that you could apply to Illinois, but The Loophole State fits especially nicely. One way the state balanced this year’s budget is via a loophole that lets the state forego paying some of this year’s Medicaid bills, about $1.7 billion, until next year. Of course without reform the state is very unlikely to have enough money next year to pay all of its Medicaid bills plus the additional $1.7 billion from this year.

Hence Gov. Quinn’s desire to borrow another $5 billion or so. Once you get on a treadmill like this, you can’t get off, it seems. The state’s bonded debt has increased to $30 billion from $9.4 billion since just 2002. Still, if the state offers a big premium to investors hungry for yield in this low-interest rate environment, some may yet be willing to scoop up the state’s debt, though the prospect of loaning money to a state that owes, according to the Tribune, some $200 billion in muni debt, unpaid bills and unfunded pension obligations may also prompt some investors to pause.

In fairness, Illinois is not the only state that’s failed to address its most fundamental fiscal problems since the financial meltdown of 2008. But Illinois has been so far and away the worst state fiscally that after the crisis earlier this year it appeared legislators in Springfield had no place to go but up. Apparently not.

 

http://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2011/11/02/illinois_budget_from_worst_to_worster_99343.html

October 11, 2011

State Senate Candidates Switched Parties

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 2:46 pm

By Steve Sadin | Highland Park Patch

An ideological evolution for West Deerfield Township Supervisor Julie Morrison and Highland Park pediatrician Arie Friedman came close to a direct collision more than 20 years before they decided to try to replace retiring state Sen. Susan Garrett (D-Lake Forest).

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October 10, 2011

Taxpayers Receive Unwelcome News

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 1:56 pm

Published in Chicago Now

“Many Cook County property taxpayers received unwelcome news in the mail early this week, news of a tax hike,” said Dr. Arie Friedman, Republican State Senate candidate in the 29th District, “delivered in the form of their second installment real estate tax bills.”

Read More

October 9, 2011

Union leaders pull down millions in public pensions

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 1:56 pm

By Andrew Thomason | Illinois Statehouse News

SPRINGFIELD — Illinois taxpayers are on the hook to make sure union officials’ six-figure pensions keep flowing for years to come.

Former employees of the National Education Association, or NEA, Illinois Education Association, or IEA, Illinois Federation of Teachers, or IFT, and Illinois Association of School Boards, or IASB, drawing pensions have collected more than $47 million from the Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System, or TRS, to date.

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October 8, 2011

Double-dipping in the teacher’s pension system

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 1:55 pm

By Andrew Thomason | Illinois Statehouse News

SPRINGFIELD — Michael Johnson didn’t wait until he retired as executive director of the Illinois Association of School Boards to start cashing in on his public pension.

Johnson earned $324,785 in compensation from the Illinois Association of School Boards, or IASB, while simultaneously collecting $209,379.43 from the Illinois Teachers’ Retirement System between July 1, 2007, and July 1, 2008, according to documents obtained by Illinois Statehouse News.

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September 18, 2011

Illinois Unemployment Rate Up Sharply to 9.9 Percent

Filed under: Uncategorized — arie @ 1:12 am

By DAVID MERCER

Illinois’ unemployment rate shot up almost half a percentage point in August to 9.9 percent. It was a fourth straight month of diminishing job prospects that state officials blame on weak consumer confidence and the struggles of the national economy.

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September 7, 2011

Tax rate pushing businesses out of Illinois

Filed under: Illinois News — admin @ 3:39 pm

SouthtownStar Editorial September 2, 2011 11:40PM

Friday’s dismal jobs report from Uncle Sam, in which essentially no jobs were created in August, sent the stock market on its latest plunge and caused some economic experts to again raise the specter of another recession.

It also got us thinking about the jobs outlook here in Illinois, where the unemployment rate exceeds the national average (9.5 percent compared with 9.1 percent) and high corporate and property taxes serve as a deterrent to companies expanding or staying, especially in Cook County.

The latest unfortunate reminder of that, and the depressing loss of manufacturing jobs in the Southland, was the recent decision by Modern Drop Forge to close its Blue Island factory and move to Merrillville, Ind.  Read More>>

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