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10 States With The Highest Debt Per Person: Report

Reuters/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 10/24/11 06:20 PM ET   Updated: 12/24/11 05:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON - The total of U.S. state debt, including pension liabilities, could surpass $4 trillion, with California owing the most and Vermont owing the least, according to an analysis released on Monday.

The nonprofit State Budget Solutions combined states' major debt and future liabilities, primarily for pensions and employee healthcare, unemployment insurance loans, outstanding bonds and projected fiscal 2011 budget gaps. It found that in total, states are in debt for $4.2 trillion.

The group, which follows state fiscal conditions and advocates for limited spending and taxes, said the deficit calculations that states make "do not offer a full picture of the states' liabilities and can rely on budget gimmicks and accounting games to hide the extent of the deficit."

The housing bust, financial crisis and economic recession caused states' tax revenue to plunge, and huge holes have emerged in their budgets over the last few years. Because all states except Vermont must end their fiscal years with balanced budgets, states have scrambled to cut spending, hike taxes, borrow and turn to the federal government for help.

Taxpayers are worried the states' poor fiscal health will persist for a long time and some Republicans in Congress have questioned whether the situation is worse than the states say.

State Budget Solutions relied on financial reports and income tax rates provided by the Federation of Tax Administrators in determining its rankings.

The true debt totals may be lower, though, because the group also used the highest estimates of pension gaps. The conservative think tank American Enterprise Institute says public pensions are short $2.8 trillion.

Others, including the nonpartisan research group Pew Center on the States, put total unfunded pension liabilities at around $700 billion.

The wide range is based on different assumptions of the returns of pension fund investments, which provide the bulk of money for benefit payments. Conservative economists say the investments will have annual returns of around 4 percent, while many funds expect returns in line with the average of the last 20 years -- closer to 8 percent.

Using the higher pension gap number, State Budget Solutions said California is in the biggest financial hole -- with total debt of more than $612 billion. New York follows with $305 billion of debt, and then Texas, with total debt of $283 billion. Vermont has the lowest amount of total debt at just over $6 billion.

The group also looked at the financial shape of states using the Pew pension projections. It came up with a total debt of $2 trillion for all states.

California still owes the most under the alternative computation, but the state's total debt drops significantly, to $307 billion. With the Pew numbers, New Jersey follows with $183 billion of debt and Illinois is next at $150 billion.

According to the analysis, California has also borrowed the most from the federal government to pay for unemployment benefits, $8.6 billion. Michigan was next, taking out $3.1 billion, and then New York, borrowing $2.9 billion.

As unemployment shot up, some states could not pay for the surge in demand for jobless benefits. The federal government loosened its lending rules to keep states from having to cut other areas of their budgets. But last month the U.S. government again began charging interest on the outstanding loans and may levy extra taxes on businesses in states with outstanding loans.

Looking at just state annual financial statements, the group found Connecticut has the highest debt per capita, at $5,402, and nine states have debt of more than $3,000 per capita.

(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by Dan Grebler)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

Here are the 10 states with the highest debt per capita, according to State Budget Solutions:

10. Oregon
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Debt per capita in 2011: $2,960
Total debt 2011: $58,019,973
Total budget gap FY2011: $4,200,000
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WASHINGTON - The total of U.S. state debt, including pension liabilities, could surpass $4 trillion, with California owing the most and Vermont owing the least, according to an analysis released o...
WASHINGTON - The total of U.S. state debt, including pension liabilities, could surpass $4 trillion, with California owing the most and Vermont owing the least, according to an analysis released o...
 
 
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05:13 PM on 11/02/2011
Interesting how most of the 10 most poverty-stricken states are red, and most of the 10 most debt-ridden states are blue. Are there any real winners here?
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Just Ask Jheri
Tomorrow is a mystery, and today is a gift.
09:57 AM on 10/27/2011
These state houses gave corporations $$$$$ to locate in their states,
thereby making huge holes that have emerged in their budgets over
the last few years.

Slick Rick did this over and over and then Texas, with total debt of $283 billion.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shifu
Train and be ready
08:39 PM on 10/26/2011
I agree. Let the red states pay their own way. No more sucking the blue states dry
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GirlOutWest
I hope to be the person my dog thinks I am.
03:01 PM on 10/26/2011
The truth is most of the list are States that have a great quality of life and will continue to draw educated and enlightened people as citizens.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank1946
Tell the Truth
07:32 AM on 10/26/2011
All Federal Paper Currencies Fail..................without exception !

Why is this ?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seanny53
Things fall apart, the center cannot hold
04:09 PM on 10/25/2011
Two right wing groups and one nonpartisan group. That's what passes for liberal bias in the mainstream media.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus
01:58 PM on 10/25/2011
Once the Red States stop sucking from the Blue Stater teet and learn to do fer theyselfs, the Blue States who actually drive the economy will be able to pay down their debt. Let the conservatives go into debt- they're the ones with the borrow-and-squander ideology.
MrStat1
I believe in the rule of law
02:16 PM on 10/25/2011
That is not how federal tax dollars are distributed. You will need Congressional action to change things.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus
06:43 PM on 10/25/2011
Yep, because Red Staters will never, ever stop taking every penny in Big Gubment handouts they can get their sticky "borrow and squander" hands on.
01:51 PM on 10/25/2011
That's what happens when Wall Street is allowed unregulated gambling and exempt from criminal prosecution while using your money. Congress gave them (Wall Street banks) that ability and has yet to take it away. All states have lost huge bases of revenue thru lost jobs and property tax.
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Hijeetz Mipanz
November 2012, The End of a Mistake.
01:46 PM on 10/25/2011
Most of them a liberal states, not shocking at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EmmaLib
Vote right, vote the right right out the door!
10:22 AM on 10/26/2011
Whoops fanned you didn't mean too. For your information 60% of those states have been Governed by REPUBLICAN Governors for more than eight years, Jodi Rell (R-CT), Schwartzenegger (R-CA) go look it up!.
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darkmark
religion, the veil of evil.
12:12 PM on 10/25/2011
i'll assume they missed the last 3 zeros on that total debt figure.
11:54 AM on 10/25/2011
who knows.

i found a factoid that says cali debt per capita is 1,800

well never know. youll never know. this article doesnt know.

nobody knows.

but the pictures are nice.
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JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:48 AM on 10/25/2011
Yup and despite what Ca. bashers and the RWNM, Ca. is in the middle of this list not the top.
Just like the like that the tax burden is high, IT'S NOT. THEY LIE!!!!!!!!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:35 PM on 10/25/2011
The debt burden of the pensions funds are high because they lost most of thier value thanks to wall streets gambling binge.
cdterm47
I am poor because I am a River to my People
01:04 PM on 10/25/2011
JScott

Hate to puncture your balloon but California has the highest debt of any state in the nation- very first sentence in this article. Per Capita figures are not worth anything. Correct figures would only include those households capable of paying back the debt. California's figures would sky rocket. Also California has a grotesquely high number of low wage earners who free load, run up the debt, but could never contribute to paying off the deb. IN SHORT CALIFORNIA IS AN ECONOMIC BASKET CASE. Someone should just pull the plug. California has been free loading for too long a time.
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Hijeetz Mipanz
November 2012, The End of a Mistake.
01:48 PM on 10/25/2011
The United States will soon be 49 states and the Federal Republic of California when the Feds have to take it over.
12:05 AM on 10/26/2011
That is utter gibberish. On the contrary, California is an economic success unparalleled in human history. The article doesn't seem to note that California now has a whopping 1/8th of the nation's people. Why? Because people come here from all of the other dysfunctional states so that they can live. Note that the most profitable and fastest growing companies in the entire WORLD are in California. Why do you think that is? Because California has the most business-friendly climate in the entire world, that's why. What nonsense this is. People are just jealous of California's prosperity and incredibly high standard of living. Well, if you worked as hard as people here do maybe you'd do just as well.

Reality check: California's GDP is approaching two TRILLION dollars. That's nearly as much as the UK. It's budget deficit is less than 1% of its GDP, well within normal limits for a country this large.
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yoozum
I hate double standards.
10:48 AM on 10/25/2011
It would be much more accurate to only measure private debt.
11:10 AM on 10/25/2011
Both are important depending on what you trying to study along with the per capita incomes.
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yoozum
I hate double standards.
12:38 PM on 10/25/2011
That's true, but individual people don't really have an impact on public debt/person while they can control private debt/person.
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Mitchman57
I might be indecisive. But... maybe not.
10:13 AM on 10/25/2011
There's a difference between a resident's debt being $3,000.00 if he's making $80,000.00/yr vs a debt of $3,000.00 for someone making $40,000.00/yr.

Also, the state income tax is WAY different state to state. If Delaware instituted just 20% of NJ's income tax their debt would be wiped in a year or two.

Dumb article.
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cavegal
The Revolution Will Not Be Privatized
01:58 PM on 10/25/2011
Excellent points.  The article makes no sense at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
krazygraphics
10:10 AM on 10/25/2011
Well when the blue state is expected to pay for our own residents AND red state welfare, its no surprise we have the highest per capita debt....

A person with no kids is more likely to have less debt than one having to support a bunch of children.