Lodi News-Sentinel

California’s other fiscal crisis

- CalMatters is a public-interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

without raising payroll taxes to pay for them.

That irresponsi­ble act reflected a political standoff between labor unions, which clamored for a benefit increase, and employers, who didn’t want to shoulder higher taxes.

What had been a healthy unemployme­nt-fund reserve was drawn down by the new benefits, becoming too weak to handle a sharp increase in payouts when recession struck a few years later.

California turned to Uncle Sam for a bailout, borrowing $63.8 billion during the recession to keep unemployme­nt insurance checks flowing as California’s jobless ranks swelled to more than 2 million workers and its unemployme­nt rate topped 12%.

When the state continued its refusal to raise payroll taxes to repay the loans, the Department of Labor taxed employers to erase the debt.

Neverthele­ss, California’s fund remained weak. Last year, in fact, the Department of Labor reported that it was the only state with a zero-solvency level.

A new report was issued this year, revealing that from zero, California’s fund is now 15% of what’s regarded as minimum solvency—still the nation’s lowest.

It ended 2018 with a little over $2 billion in the kitty. But unless changes are made, it’s unlikely to improve even though unemployme­nt today is very low and high employment means more payroll taxes flowing into the fund.

Even during this relatively prosperous period, the state is paying out far more than $5 billion a year in benefits while annual payroll tax receipts are only slightly higher, according to the state Employment Developmen­t Department’s own annual report, published in May.

The report projects that yearend balances will creep up to $3.2 billion by 2020, assuming there’s no recession. But that’s still a very low number vis-àvis the potential hit. As the report puts it, “the current financing structure leaves the UI Fund unable to self-correct and achieve a fund balance sufficient to withstand an economic downturn.”

The fund’s weakness doesn’t score very high in terms of political sexiness. But it involves big money and the welfare of California­ns who might lose their jobs during a recession.

There are four ways to make the fund truly solvent: raise the payroll tax rate, widen the wage base that’s taxed (it’s now $7,000 a year), reduce benefits and/or tighten eligibilit­y for benefits.

Employers dislike the first two, and the latter two are politicall­y impossible in a Democratic Legislatur­e closely tied to unions.

Unless this political stalemate is resolved, California’s Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund will be clobbered in the next economic downturn, forcing us to beg Uncle Sam for another bailout.

Such loans would incur hefty interest charges, and employers would still have to repay them one way or the other.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States