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Post Published: Apr 1, 2011

4-14-11 "State And Municipal Debt: Tough Choices Ahead"

 

Hearing Documents

 

Hearing Video

 4-14-11_Full_Committee_Hearing_Screen_Shot

 

Panel I | Panel II

 

Chairman Darrell Issa Hearing Preview Statement

 

“State and Municipal Debt: Tough Choices Ahead”

 

April 14, 2011

 

Thursday’s Full Committee hearing builds on the work of our Subcommittee on TARP, Financial Services and Bailouts of Public and Private Programs, Chaired by Representative Patrick McHenry. These hearings have taken a hard look at the severity of fiscal problems faced by states and municipalities, examples of reforms that could put governments on sustainable paths, and the role the federal government has played in aggravating state budget problems.

 

Subcommittee Chairman McHenry made one thing very clear in the first of these hearings: there will be no more bailouts on our watch. The evidence shows that states still have the ability to turn around their bleak financial situations. For too long, taxpayers across our country have been held hostage by shady accounting and politically-driven promises that are untenable. We are witnesses to a slow motion budgetary train wreck. It will not be easy and it must be done soon, but there is still time to hit the brakes.

 

To understand impediments to reform and what it takes to climb out of a deep fiscal hole, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker will testify about how he successfully championed sweeping reforms that will keep his state solvent. Moody’s, a credit rating agency, recently announced that the reforms will have a positive impact on Wisconsin’s credit rating, a further testament to the merits of Governor Walker’s courageous efforts.

 

Governor Peter Shumlin of Vermont will also offer insight into how long-term challenges are being addressed in his state.

 

Finally, the hearing will feature experts who understand the inevitable pain that would accompany inaction.

 

At a time when our federal government is eye-to-eye with a debt burden that threatens our ability to win the future, it is imperative that states do not cross the point of no return. Make no mistake: U.S. states and municipalities are starting to look increasingly like Greece, Spain, and Portugal. According to economists that have used accurate accounting practices to gauge the depth of the problem, there are currently over $3.5 trillion in unfunded pension liabilities at the state and municipal levels. There is no time to waste.

 

Witnesses
Panel I
Governor
State of Wisconsin
 
Governor
State of Vermont
 
Panel II
Resident Scholar
The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research
 
President
National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation
 
Professor of Finance
University of Rochester Simon Graduate School of Business
 
Dr. Desmond Lachman
Part IPart II
Resident Scholar
The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research

 

Other Documents