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California's Ailing Economy Could Prolong US Recession

JULIET WILLIAMS   06/29/09 04:54 PM ET   AP

Schwarzenegger

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California faces a $24 billion budget shortfall, an eye-popping amount that dwarfs many states' entire annual spending plans.

Beyond California's borders, why should anyone care that the home of Google and the Walt Disney Co. might stop paying its bills this week?

Virtually all states are suffering in the recession, some worse than California. But none has the economic horsepower of the world's eighth-largest economy, home to one in eight Americans.

California accounts for 12 percent of the nation's gross domestic product and the largest share of retail sales of any state. It also sends far more in tax revenue to the federal government than it receives _ giving a dollar for every 80 cents it gets back _ which means Californians are keeping social programs afloat across the country.

While the deficit only affects the state, California's deepening economic malaise could make it harder for the entire nation's economy to recover.

When the state stumbles, its sheer size _ 38.3 million people _ creates fallout for businesses from Texas to Michigan.

"California is the key catalyst for U.S. retail sales, and if California falls further you will see the U.S. economy suffer significantly," said retail consultant Burt P. Flickinger, managing director of Strategic Resource Group. He warned of more bankruptcies of national retail chains and brand suppliers.

Even if California lawmakers solve the deficit quickly, there will likely be more government furloughs and layoffs and tens of billions of dollars in spending cuts. That will ripple through the state economy, sowing fear of even more job losses.

Californians have already been scaling back for months as the state's unemployment rate has climbed to a record 11.5 percent in May. Increases to the income, sales and vehicle license taxes approved by lawmakers and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in February acted as a further drag on spending.

Personal income declined in California in 2008 for the first time since the Great Depression, and income tax revenue fell by 34 percent during the first five months of this year.

The decrease in spending is especially evident in automobiles. California is the nation's largest single auto market, and sales are down 40 percent from last year. Auto dealers see little hope of a quick turnaround, especially after a 1 percentage point increase in the state sales tax and hike of the vehicle license fee.

State agencies also canceled contracts for hundreds of new vehicles, retroactive to March, said Brian Maas, director of government affairs for the California New Car Dealers Association.

Because California's $1.7 trillion annual economy is so important, the state's treasurer has asked for federal help _ in the form of a guarantee that would allow California and other states to take out short-term loans at lower interest rates.

A federal guarantee would cut the interest rate on the state's borrowing by as much as half, saving California taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.

"It's not that California got itself into trouble and wants the federal government to bail it out," said Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Los Angeles. "California wants the federal government to do for a fee that which Wall Street would do for a fee if Wall Street wasn't broken."

But some members of Congress worry about setting a precedent for bailing out local governments.

"You've got many states throughout this country, you've got many cities that are in tough financial problems, so they will all come for help," explained Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfield.

Any extra federal assistance is sure to be a hard sell in Washington and elsewhere because of California's free-spending image.

That may have been true before the recession, but the state cut $15 billion in government spending in February and plans to solve most of the $24 billion deficit through even more cuts.

Government workers face the possibility of three-day-a-month furloughs, teachers are being laid off, lower-income college students stand to lose their grants and hundreds of thousands of poor children could go without health care.

The recession is behind this fiscal turmoil. Some 1 million jobs are expected to be lost in California in two years and unemployment is estimated to peak at 12.3 percent in early 2010, said Jeff Michael, director of the Business Forecasting Center at the University of the Pacific in Stockton.

Schwarzenegger has repeatedly stressed that he hasn't asked for a bailout and doesn't want any special treatment for California _ though he likely wouldn't reject more stimulus funding if it came his way.

Economist Stephen Levy, director of the Center for the Continuing Study of the California Economy in Palo Alto, has argued for another nationwide stimulus package to help all states avoid further cuts to social programs intended to help vulnerable people.

"If we are the bellwether, I would have Californians reach out to other states and really make a plea for national assistance," Levy said. "The recession is not our fault."

___

Associated Press writers contributing to this report include: Anne D'Innocenzio in New York; Kevin Freking in Washington, D.C.; and Kimberly Johnson in Detroit.

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California faces a $24 billion budget shortfall, an eye-popping amount that dwarfs many states' entire annual spending plans. Beyond California's borders, why should anyone...
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California faces a $24 billion budget shortfall, an eye-popping amount that dwarfs many states' entire annual spending plans. Beyond California's borders, why should anyone...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
08:44 PM on 07/01/2009
Harrier. You state the problem right on. Every civilized country in the world recognizes the cause-effect relationship between manufacturing-technology and membership competence and viability. Not our corrupt leaders. Our despicable leaders are willing to deny this fact while taking financial institution donations. This great depression is destroying the remaining sinews of industrial strength as our competitors wait in the shadows for bankruptcy proceedings to buy up our betrayed country.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
07:36 PM on 07/01/2009
Hopalongpoppyseed. You are wise in not agreeing with everthing i write. Hell, I don't know why we have such ignominious leadership. And why leaders and many groups are failing to unite to combat our economic decline and subjugation by financial interests. There is evidence that responsible governors find themselves without followers, that is, legislative bodies unwilling to follow. It is impossible to lead when the organizational membership refuse to be led.
States are faced with the choices of raising taxes and cutting services: in many states the choice is both actions. Legislators refuse to make hard choices for fear of being thrown out of office.
The poor quality of American leadership, perhaps, is a result of the declining competence and character of the generality of Americans. Old citizens (and others) who have lived curious, observant lives recognize this fact. All you need do is ask any of them and you will receive an ear full.
12:49 PM on 07/01/2009
HP's headline writers blew it, it's their established pattern, by writing that Ca's de facto bankurptcy could prolong the USA's recession/growing depression. Ca's financial collapse will exacerbate the effects of the growing depression & it will lengthen the duration of the current worsening depression.
09:47 AM on 07/01/2009
illegal immigrants and the gangs they bring to california have killed that state. They have shut down 60 hospitals since 2000. 60. They eat up social services and work for cash which brings absolutely 0 dollars in revenue to the state. They also send 20 billion dollars a year back to mexico. money made in Cali, spent somewhere else.
07:42 AM on 07/01/2009
The CA houses spend money like drunken sailors. The state removal of graduated taxes has created class warfare. The loss of manufacturing jobs, pension and attacks on unions trying to protect jobs from going overseas and getting their company CEO to open their books to prove what they say have been attacked. Now that manufacturing jobs are gone and industries that support it are also, there is no industrial infrastructure and all you have are service industries that pay for less. CEOs salaries and tax are structured to remove workers, not keep them. The government took away workers ability to get retirement what most regard as required heath benefits. Workers Compensation actually attacks workers and is always denied the worker. When an education budget it cut, the goal is to cut at the top, first remove the executives, and work your way down while saving the teachers. For some reason it's reverse on CA. There needs to be structural reform. The middle class is not large enough nor makes enough money to support perks for the rich or state. We need to get back to the basics. China is getting to be a world power by simply carving out all of California's manufacturing. Because repubs were in office and the state was democratic, no help was given to the state and bases were removed in hopes of a starved state could be flipped to Repub. Deregulation of electric utilities was the worst mistake CA ever made under Gov Wilson.
02:54 AM on 07/01/2009
So what does the Blue Ribbon Fire Commission think about Arnie and the Republicans???
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Bettysdad
The arc of human history is to the left.
02:41 AM on 07/01/2009
The Dem majority in CA need to call Arnold's bluff, and shut down the state.

Way too many people think their taxes go only to welfare, and that they get nothing in return.

Shut the mother down and let's see what middle-class Californians have to say about watching their lifestyles collapse.

No colleges or universities, no roads, no prisons, no beaches, no parks, no state aid to local schools, no state firefighters, no highway patrol, no agriculture department, no water, no nothing.

The wailing will be heard all across America, and people will realize the stupidity of Reagonomics and the entire Republican philosophy.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SeekWisdom
01:59 AM on 07/01/2009
No worries. California is too big to fail. :-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
citizen of the universe
"Lois, Mom, Mama, Mommie, Ma"
02:19 AM on 07/03/2009
Ha!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
11:44 PM on 06/30/2009
This dream-like article about the potentially lagging indicator, California shows the peril in operating on false data and misleading information. The writer knows with all our significant-other propagandists that this recession is on its last legs. Only California is having some problem gaining a handle on its finances.
The overwhelming evidence that we are entering a terrible depression is no where to be discerned. And the readers feel less alarmed at the specious knowledge that things will soon be all right. Don't do anything else. The recovery is right around the corner. Then events gradually spin out of control.
We are the recipients of the worst leadership in the history of our Republic. Self-interests have drowned the public interests. Favoritism has outflanked national survival as an agenda item. The impulses of dynasty and plutocracy are overwhelming the impulses of common cause for a more perfect union. The more schooled and educated our citizens become the more anti-American they become. Their selfishness is for preservation of position of family and class rather than opportunity and growth of all citizens according to their motivation and ability. Our country is becoming more rigid and inelastic as position in life is predicted by the chances of birth. Our behavior is indicating that over reliance on schooling and education can destroy a democratic civilization.
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
02:15 AM on 07/01/2009
Self-interests have drowned the public interests. Favoritism has outflanked national survival as an agenda item. The impulses of dynasty and plutocracy are overwhelming the impulses of common cause for a more perfect union.

themodernleader, I don't agree with everything you say, but this is one of your best observations. I am beginning to think we need some structural changes to break what you have called, " our "inelastic," ways. It is said that California suffers a gridlock due to the requirements of more than simple majorities in the Assembly. Imagine if the California state government was modeled as a parliamentary form of government with the Governor subject to a vote of confidence like a Prime Minister. I'll bet that would facilitate coalitions that would break up the gridlock. Heck, even Nebraska's unicameral legislature would probably be better for California.
03:02 AM on 07/01/2009
Yeah, people with low ability level should be slaves, according to you.
06:47 PM on 06/30/2009
It doesn't matter, call them IOU's, The U.S., pretty colorful shells, they'll all be worth the same soon which is nothing. When hyperinflation comes, you might as well use paper towels as your currency.

I say we just get it over with and take the penny and rename it the dollar.
04:20 PM on 06/30/2009
People now are getting paid the SAME WAGES as they did in 2000. But are prices at 2000
levels? H3LL NO. So they go into debt, adding more layers tothe USA debt ponzi scheme.

good finance articles: http://heavysidetrade.blogspot.com/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
04:04 PM on 06/30/2009
Illegals and Enron buying of debt through Arnhole.
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Artos
Down with Tyrants
02:35 PM on 06/30/2009
Yeah but to hear Economists tell it the Recession has bottomed out and it looks like things are getting better. Whoa, and what Planet do these guys live on. Certainly not the same one that we do.
01:03 PM on 06/30/2009
It's time to terminate the governors' command of California. He needs to be recalled like his predecessor. Any person willing to sacrifice the health care of 1 million poor children and shut down welfare in the middle of a depression in order to help big oil and big tobacco does not deserve o remain in office. He needs to get on board his 747 and go back Hollywood or Cabo or wherever else he lives. His acting career as governor is over.
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Hopalongpoppyseed
May you reap what you sow.
02:19 AM on 07/01/2009
Change the California government to a parliament and break the gridlock. A vote of no confidence would change the state government. Time for a referendum on this California?
12:15 PM on 06/30/2009
I understand that it is front page news that California in going into the Expensive department like canabis selling buisness to get themselves out of debt? Is that true? If so what are going to be the laws for the people driving under the influence.. where i live they have a number of drive up liquor stores.. encourages driving while drinking.. how will the State of California discourage DUI's?

This is absoulte crazy....
02:58 AM on 07/01/2009
There's no test that can tell you how recently someone smoked pot, number one. It only tells that you smoked it sometime within a week or two.
Also, where are the studies saying how many accidents are caused by pot smokers? There are tons of studies all about alcohol and driving. Not so many about pot and driving.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
citizen of the universe
"Lois, Mom, Mama, Mommie, Ma"
02:30 AM on 07/03/2009
If nothing else Californias are inventive and would figure out a way to make weed a job market, and revenue generator to the State. Right now, somewhere in Sacramento the conversation has begun.