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What California can do for its budget

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TEXT OF STORY

Steve Chiotakis: Polls open in about an hour here in California, where there's a lot on the line. Trying to shore up a $15 billion budget shortfall. And as Marketplace's Stacey Vanek-Smith reports, the Golden State's not alone in the budget-crunching department.


Stacey Vanek-Smith: Most states are required by law to balance their budgets. Deficits aren't an options. If tax revenue drops, states either have to cut costs or find more money.

Jon Shure directs the state fiscal project at the Center on Budget and Policy priorities:

Jon Shure: Tax revenues across the country are down by larger amounts than at any time in the last 50 years. States can argue about who has it worse, but the bottom line is they're all in pretty deep trouble.

Today Californians vote on measures that would raise taxes and slash budgets for health care and education. If the measures don't pass, California could try to tap everybody's new favorite source of cash: the U.S. Treasury.

But Shure points out the federal government has already given states nearly $150 billion to cover budget shortfalls. And states need to figure out other ways balance their budgets.

Shure: You know the way for states to get out of this is by a diverse set of actions.

Shure says states need to try a mix of issuing bonds, raising taxes and cutting budgets.

I'm Stacey Vanek-Smith for Marketplace.

About the author

Stacey Vanek Smith is a senior reporter for Marketplace, where she covers banking, consumer finance, housing and advertising.
Raymond Slusar's picture
Raymond Slusar - May 20, 2009

The results of yesterday's special elections demonstrate that California's political system is broken. Every measure which provided some solution to the state's budget problems failed. The only measure that passed did so becuase it appealed to the emotional need of the mob to lash out. Even though such lashing will do no real good in solving the fundamental problems of the California economy and certainly will not alleviate the current budget crisis. Yesterday's election was an exercise in futility, demonstrating what should have been predicted: That the mob is more inclined to make on-the-fly emotional decisions than it is to make well-researched decision dealing with complex state budgets issues. What did we expect?