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State And Local Budget Cuts Are Slowing U.S. Economy

MICHAEL SANDLER and JEANNINE AVERSA   02/25/11 07:09 PM ET   AP

Budget Cuts

WASHINGTON — Deep spending cuts by state and local governments pose a growing threat to an economy that is already grappling with high unemployment, depressed home prices and the surging cost of oil.

Lawmakers at state capitols and city halls are slashing jobs and programs, arguing that some pain now is better than a lot more later. But the cuts are coming at a price – weaker growth at the national level.

The clearest sign to date was a report Friday on U.S. gross domestic product for the final three months of 2010. The government lowered its growth estimate, pointing to larger-than-expected cuts by state and local governments. The report suggested that worsening state budget problems could hold back the recovery by putting more people out of work and reducing consumer spending.

Across the country, governors and lawmakers are proposing broad cutbacks – lowering fees paid to nursing homes in Florida, reducing health insurance subsidies for lower-income Pennsylvanians, closing prisons in New York state and scaling back programs for elderly and disabled Californians.

"The massive financial problems at the state and local levels have and will continue to restrain growth," said economist Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisors.

State and local governments account for 91 percent of all government spending on primary education, according to the Brookings Institution. And they provide 71 percent of higher-education spending. States also account for more than 70 percent of spending on roads, bridges and other infrastructure.

But those same governments cut spending at a 2.4 percent rate at the end of last year. And economists predict they will slash their budgets by up to 2.5 percent this year – potentially the sharpest reduction since 1943. The deepest cuts are expected to occur in the first six months of this year.

The worst cuts so far_ 3.8 percent – came in the January-to-March period of 2010. That was the sharpest quarterly drop since late 1983, when the U.S. economy was recovering from a severe recession. Most economists think the cutbacks this year will exert an even bigger economic drag than last year.

Newly elected Republican governors are leading the charge. They're acting on campaign pledges to shrink government to meet budget gaps. They favor smaller governments with lower taxes and less regulation, which they say will boost private-sector growth and job creation.

Some Democrats – including Govs. Andrew Cuomo of New York and Jerry Brown of California – have followed suit. They're pushing for cuts to social programs and concessions from unions.

The governors' push for painful cuts comes just as they gather in Washington this weekend for their winter meeting.

"We have to balance our budgets. We have to address costs. And we also have to move forward at the same time," Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley, head of the Democratic Governors Association, said after his group met with President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden at the White House.

No state has attracted more attention than Wisconsin. Pointing to the state's projected $3.6 billion gap, Republican Gov. Scott Walker wants to strip state workers of collective bargaining rights. He also wants them to contribute more to their pensions and health insurance costs.

The budget fight has taken center stage in Congress. Democrats are bending to Republican demands for spending cuts to avoid a shutdown of the federal government next week.

The reduction in federal spending has a direct effect on states and municipalities. They depend on money from Washington to keep schools operating, put police officers on the street and subsidize public services like job training. The end of federal stimulus programs is also widening state deficits.

Many governors, including those in Florida, New York and Colorado, are pursuing tighter budgets. Their proposals include laying off public workers and teachers, reducing spending for education and health care, and ending some social services. They're also targeting public pension funds and health insurance plans and seeking larger contributions from public employees.

State and local budget experts fear the cutbacks will intensify this year. States are struggling to close budget gaps of about $125 billion for the upcoming budget year, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

That's a smaller gap than states faced in the past two years. But this time, governors won't have federal stimulus funds to help close the deficits. And state governments, in turn, are reducing the aid they send to local governments.

"We suspect that these cutbacks are going to deepen over the next couple of quarters," said Mark Muro, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. "It's likely we're only beginning to see the state and local drag."

In Florida, newly elected Republican Gov. Rick Scott wants to reduce the state's budget 5 percent. To get there, he wants to slash 8,600 state jobs and reduce Medicaid costs through a 5 percent cut in fees paid to hospitals and nursing homes, but not doctors.

Health-insurance cuts are popular with many Republican governors. Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett, facing a projected $4 billion-plus deficit, said he can't find the cash to extend a program that subsidizes health care for 41,000 lower-income adults and is nearly out of money.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer is suggesting that the state drop Medicaid coverage for 250,000 low-income people to make up about half of the state's projected shortfall of about $1 billion.

It's not just Republicans demanding tough fiscal medicine. In New York, Gov. Cuomo has said up to 9,800 state employees could be laid off if public-employee unions don't agree to millions of dollars in concessions.

The newly elected Democrat has also proposed $1 billion in cuts to New York's Medicaid program, with its 4.7 million recipients. He also wants to close some prisons, freeze wages for nearly 200,000 state workers, cut $1.5 billion in aid to public schools and chop 10 percent from the state's operating budget.

In California, Brown has imposed a state hiring freeze and is proposing cuts to a host of social programs that serve the poor, elderly and disabled. He is also seeking more than $12 billion in tax extensions and fees. The state is grappling with a $26.6 billion fiscal crisis.

State spending represents just a fraction of the nation's economic activity. Consumers typically spend roughly six times more than state and local governments do. So a big increase in consumer spending can offset public-sector cuts.

U.S. consumers boosted spending at a 4.1 percent annual rate in the final quarter of 2010 year; state and local governments cut spending at a 2.4 percent pace. If consumers had spent just 0.4 percentage point more, they would have offset the state and local government cutbacks.

That said, layoffs hurt consumer spending. And states and local governments are cutting their payrolls. State and local governments have cut more than 400,000 jobs in the past two years. Budget pressures will force an average of 20,000 more job cuts each month for the rest of this year, estimates Jon Shure of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank.

State tax revenue has begun to grow again after falling sharply in recent years. But many governors are now proposing tax cuts as a way to encourage business activity, Shure said. That's likely to escalate pressure for spending cuts because most states must balance their budgets each year.

___

Contributing to this story were Associated Press writers Christopher S. Rugaber in Washington; Sandra Chereb in Carson City, Nev.; Juliet Williams in Sacramento, Calif.; Paul Davenport in Phoenix; Geoff Mulvihill in Haddonfield, N.J.; Michael Virtanen in Albany, N.Y.; Colleen Slevin in Denver; Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pa.; Jim Davenport in Columbia, S.C.; Bill Kaczor in Tallahassee, Fla.; and Jonathan Cooper in Salem, Ore.

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WASHINGTON — Deep spending cuts by state and local governments pose a growing threat to an economy that is already grappling with high unemployment, depressed home prices and the surging cost of...
WASHINGTON — Deep spending cuts by state and local governments pose a growing threat to an economy that is already grappling with high unemployment, depressed home prices and the surging cost of...
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This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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democrats for life
republicans need not apply
02:13 AM on 03/15/2011
the pubs are doing the exact same thing Hoover did, they need to go now, send them to the north pole
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leothelion33
08:06 AM on 03/03/2011
Welcome to the Republican Recession of 2011.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
01:32 AM on 03/03/2011
Yes, it's all about politics for the Republicans, middle class be damned.
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bordway
If you need more than 7 rounds, use a knife.
09:59 AM on 03/01/2011
Housing collapse - lower property tax revenue.
Extending tax cuts - lower income tax revenue.
Eliminating positions - lower income tax revenue.
Loss of positions that support the eliminated positions - lower income tax revenue.
Lower consumer demand due to loss of positions - lower sales tax revenue

We're broke? Duh.

Now the education of our children, who should not be saddled with our debt, will initially be saddled with less educational opportunities, thanks to this wonderful initiative. Then they will be saddled with the debt, which continues to be ignored. We're setting this country up for failure in the long term in favor of satisfying people's wallets in the short term.
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clarlynn
when government fears the people, there is liberty
09:27 AM on 03/01/2011
..just checking
11:41 PM on 02/28/2011
THAT IS PRECISELY THE REPUBLICAN STRATEGY SO THAT THEY HAVE A CHANCE IN REPLACING OBAMA IN 2012. MEAN WHILE SCREW THE AMERICAN PEOPLE.
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DuaneBidoux
Proud liberal
09:00 PM on 02/28/2011
I don't understand--according to Republicans steep cuts in government spending are giong to be good for growth and job creation.

I guess I'll never understand economics.
05:20 PM on 03/02/2011
or conservatives choose to not understand economics. Instead they pedal the cult of the free market. I guess they have a point, as its clear that Jesus voted for Ronald Reagan. Jesus was also supported raygunomics, which I believe means vaporizing poor people with a ray-gun, to increase the perceived wealth of your nation.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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OldJazzyGirl
Sick of the fracked up righties.
12:58 PM on 02/28/2011
Arizona has a genius plan to eliminate Medicaid (called ACCCHS in AZ). By doing this they will pull $7.8B - yes folks - 7.8 Billion federal dollars out of the Arizona economy. It is estimated that ALL rural and small town hospitals will be closed in one year. Tens of thousands of medical workers will leave the state. We will have no medical infrastructure to handle any kind of epidemic. 1.3 million people will no longer have access to any kind of healthcare. This includes senior citizens who qualify for Medicare/Medicaid dual enrollment. Some of the them live on less than $9000 a year and cannot afford medications or co-pays. It also includes people in nursing homes. They will just be pushed into the streets on this plan. All this is being done by elected officials who will get much bigger pensions than the "evil" bread and butter government workers.
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CCee
All Equal Under God.
04:23 PM on 02/28/2011
Yes... But Brewer did just give over 500 million to business in tax breaks...

Over 100 people dead or fixing to die for transplants in AZ for want of $1 million dollars..

Brewer's attitude "Sad but we have no money" - then she spins around and gives Baldy Mc Babeau 5 million to expand his sheriff’s department - an expansion voted Against by his Own County (under whose jurisdiction he is elected to work for) because they didn't like the idea of his Police Society Disposition and told him that the expansion and excess enforcement powers he sought fell outside of his duties and was not necessary....

So...We can Thank Brewer for funding  AZ's "small government" dreams at least huh? Arizonans are dying but.... Can't think about that now... Were Being INVADED!
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12:08 PM on 02/28/2011
http://www .washingto nmonthly.c om/archive s/individu al/2011_02 /028020.ph p

“"Asked exactly how many thousands of Americans would be left unemployed as a result of GOP cuts, Boehner said he didn't know (and apparently , doesn't care). So, Milbank looked into it.

I checked with budget expert Scott Lilly of the Center for American Progress, and, using the usual multiplier s, he calculated that the cuts--a net of $59 billion in the last half of fiscal 2011 -- would lead to the loss of 650,000 government jobs, and the indirect loss of 325,000 more jobs as fewer government workers travel and buy things. That's nearly 1 million jobs -- possibly enough to tip the economy back into recession.

So be it?
05:26 AM on 03/03/2011
1937 all over again,,,how about that!!!
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12:08 PM on 02/28/2011
“
Let's assume that Boehner is not as heartless as his words sound. Let's accept that he really believes, as he put it, that "if we reduce spending we'll create a better environmen t for job creation in America." A more balanced budget would indeed improve the jobs market -- in the long run.

But in the short run, the cuts Boehner and his caucus propose would cause a shock to the economy that would slow, if not reverse, the recovery. And however pure Boehner's motives may be, the dirty truth is that a stall in the recovery would bring political benefits to the Republican s in the 2012 elections. It is in their political interests for unemployme nt to remain higher for the next two years. "So be it" is callous but rational."
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grf67
11:18 AM on 02/28/2011
Exactly what the repubs want since they hate American workers and the president.
10:42 AM on 02/28/2011
You don't say? I'm a retired teacher in Los Angeles. My salary increases are somewhat limited, although a Demcoratic governor has reduced the chances that my pension will be canceled. But under the circumstances, do you think I'm going to spend any money??? No way, Jose. Too bad for businesses, but when you cut the salaries of school teachers, then you are also eliminating your customers.
10:26 AM on 02/28/2011
Given the choice between balancing budgets with "shared sacrifice" between working folks who give up benefits and pay and raising taxes on their corporate and wealthy friends, the Republicans choose the former ONLY. The bonus is that the unemployment rate rises, the economy stalls, and they have a distressed economy guaranteed for the 2012 presidential election. What happened to the election season mantra of "jobs, jobs, jobs" -- that was quickly forgotten by Boehner and co.