Comment

The Mighty Thor #160, January 1969

866
RogueOne3/30/2010 9:59:55 am PDT

re: #841 avanti

The doctor fix has been used every year recently, and not a part of the health care bills cost.

Accounting trickery. That money is still going to be spent whether you want to count it or not. They took it out so the CBO numbers would look good, if it’s not a big deal then why not leave it in? It’s like the earlier story “We’re going to make $8 bill from Citi stock!” woo-hoo, that only puts us down by $20 billion or so!

Another story about the states use of accounting chicanery:

nytimes.com


California, New York and other states are showing many of the same signs of debt overload that recently took Greece to the brink — budgets that will not balance, accounting that masks debt, the use of derivatives to plug holes, and armies of retired public workers who are counting on benefits that are proving harder and harder to pay.
And states are responding in sometimes desperate ways, raising concerns that they, too, could face a debt crisis.

New Hampshire was recently ordered by its State Supreme Court to put back $110 million that it took from a medical malpractice insurance pool to balance its budget. Colorado tried, so far unsuccessfully, to grab a $500 million surplus from Pinnacol Assurance, a state workers’ compensation insurer that was privatized in 2002. It wanted the money for its university system and seems likely to get a lesser amount, perhaps $200 million.

Connecticut has tried to issue its own accounting rules. Hawaii has inaugurated a four-day school week. California accelerated its corporate income tax this year, making companies pay 70 percent of their 2010 taxes by June 15. And many states have balanced their budgets with federal health care dollars that Congress has not yet appropriated.

We’re headed for a nasty fall and pretending that spending money we don’t have is going to save us is making it worse.