Illinois is
going over the cliff.
Jan. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Illinois lawmakers will try this week to accomplish in a few days what they have been unable to do in the past two years -- resolve the state’s worst financial crisis.
The legislative session that begins today will take aim at a budget deficit of at least $13 billion, including a backlog of more than $6 billion in unpaid bills and almost $4 billion in missed payments to underfunded state pensions.
The jig is up, but they're deluding themselves just a little bit longer.
Lawmakers meeting in Springfield will consider spending cuts, an expansion of casino gambling and a proposal from Democratic Governor Pat Quinn to borrow $15 billion to pay overdue bills and help fill the budget hole.
It's like watching an alcoholic hit bottom. The solution is gambling and borrowing? Good luck with that, boys.
Amazing. Very nice analogy.
ReplyDeleteThe loan part is the scary bit. Illinois' borrowing costs are already high. Finding takers for $15B worth of what look to be junk bonds is going to be very expensive.
ReplyDeleteOh yes, and thanks for the compliment!
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