By PATRICK J. BUCHANAN
San Bernardino, Calif., has now followed Stockton into bankruptcy.
Harrisburg
and Scranton, Pa., and Jefferson County, Ala., home to Birmingham are already
there to welcome them.
Detroit
has been taken into receivership by Michigan. A plan under discussion is to
level a fourth of the city and reconvert it into the pasture and farmland it
used to be a century ago.
On
the Web, one may find a pictorial tale of two cities: Hiroshima, a smoking
flattened ruin in 1945, now a beautiful gleaming metropolis. And Detroit, forge
and furnace of democracy in 1945, today resembling Dresden after Bomber Command
paid its visit.
Other American cities are exploring bankruptcy to escape from under the mountain of debt they have amassed or to get out of contracts that an earlier generation of politicians negotiated.
No
longer shameful, bankruptcy is now seen as an option for U.S. cities. The
crisis of the public sector has come to River City.
What
happened to us?
In
the Reagan-Clinton prosperity, officials earned popularity by making
commitments that could be met only if the good times lasted forever. They added
new beneficiaries to old programs and launched new ones. They hired more
bureaucrats, aides, teachers, firemen, cops.
Government’s
share of the labor force soared to 22.5 million. This is almost three times the
number in the public sector when JFK took the oath of office. These employees
were guaranteed job security and high salaries, given subsidized health care,
and promised early retirement and pensions that the private sector could not
match.
The
balance between the private and public sectors shifted. As a share of the U.S.
population, the number of taxpayers fell, as tax consumers–the beneficiaries of
government programs and government employees who run those programs – rose.
The
top one percent now pays 40 percent of the income tax. The top 10 percent pays
70 percent. The bottom half, scores of millions of workers, pay nothing. They
ride free.
This
could not go on forever. And when something cannot go on forever it will, by
Stein’s Law, stop. The Great Recession brought it to a stop. We have come to
the end of the line.
U.S.
cities depend on property and sales taxes. But property tax revenue has fallen
with the collapse of the housing market. Sales tax revenue has fallen as a
result of the recession that has kept the consumers out of the malls.
Revenues
down, cities and counties face a choice. Raise taxes, or cut payrolls and
services. But if taxes rise or workers are laid off and services decline,
Americans in our mobile society move across city and state lines, as they are
moving from California to Colorado, Nevada and Arizona.
This
does not end the crisis, it exacerbates it.
Bankruptcy
not only offers cities relief from paying interest to bondholders, it enables
mayors to break contracts with public service unions. Since the recession began,
650,000 government workers, almost all city, county or state employees, have
lost their jobs. Millions have seen pay and benefits cut.
The
salad days of the public sector are over. From San Joaquin Valley to Spain, its
numbers have begun to shrink and its benefits to be cut.
A
declaration of bankruptcy by a few cities, however, has an impact upon all–for
it usually involves a default on debts. This terrifies investors, who then
demand a higher rate of interest for the increased risk they take when they buy
the new municipal bonds that fund the educational and infrastructure projects
of the solvent cities.
Cities
and counties have no way out of the vicious cycle. Rising deficits and debts
force new tax hikes and new cuts in schools, cops and firemen. Residents see
the town going down, and pack and leave.
This
further reduces the tax base and further enlarges the deficit.
Then
the process begins anew.
This
is what is happening in Spain and Greece, which have reached the early 1930s
stage of rioting and the rise of radical parties.
Since
the New Deal, Keynesianism has been our answer to recession. As the private
sector shrinks, the public sector expands to fill the void until the private
sector returns to health. Only Keynesianism is not working.
Obama
gave us an $800 billion stimulus and four deficits totaling $5 trillion. The
Fed tripled the money supply and put interest rates at near zero. The banks are
flush with cash. But the engine will not turn over.
What
about supply-side tax cuts? But with the Bush tax cuts still in place, taxes
are generating the smallest share of gross domestic product in decades.
How
much bigger a deficit should we run?
Liberal
economists are saying, deficits be damned, print money and spend. With
Republicans blocking tax hikes and Democrats resisting cuts in Medicare,
Medicaid and Social Security, all eyes turn to the Fed.
As
Milton Friedman said, “Inflation is the one form of taxation that can be
imposed without legislation.”
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