HOME | DD

OccupyDA — Cities in Red: Austerity Hits America
Published: 2012-12-05 15:25:22 +0000 UTC; Views: 8414; Favourites: 1; Downloads: 0
Redirect to original
Description The European debt crisis, and the ensuing austerity-fueled chaos, can seem to Americans like a distant battle that portends a dark future. Yet a closer look reveals that the future is already here. American austerity has largely taken the form of municipal budget crises precipitated by predatory Wall Street lending practices. The debt financing of U.S. cities and towns, a neoliberal economic model that long precedes the current recession, has inflicted deep and growing suffering on communities across the country.

In July 2012, Mayor Christopher Doherty of Scranton, Pennsylvania, reduced all city employees’ salaries to the minimum wage. With a stroke of his pen, wages for teachers, firefighters, police, and other municipal workers, many of whom had been on the job for decades, dropped to $7.25 per hour. The city, the mayor explained, simply could not pay them more. Ron Allen, who reported the story for NBC Nightly News, repeated this assessment. Cities like Scranton, he said archives.nbclearn.com/portal/s… , “just don’t have the money” to pay city employees more than the minimum wage. Officials blamed the crisis on a declining tax base, on reduced revenue from the state, and on public sector labor contracts that the city could no longer afford.

What does it mean to say that a former steel town in decline “just doesn’t have the money” to pay its bills? It means that it no longer has access to credit markets controlled by the big banks. For years, Scranton officials, like officials across the United States, have been selling municipal bonds to finance everything from basic services to development projects. Scranton’s problems careened out of control when they city’s parking authority threatened to default on its bonds. Wall Street responded aggressively by cutting off its credit line, and city workers paid a steep price. American-style austerity arrived in Scranton under the guise of budget cuts blamed on public employees, whose salaries and pensions had nothing to do with the economic crisis.

Scranton’s problems are hardly unique. Municipalities across the country are grappling with declining local tax revenue and reduced federal funding in an era when growth and development are equated with prosperity. This toxic mix has produced a $3.7 trillion municipal debt market, a revenue juggernaut for Wall Street. Municipal bonds are issued by virtually every city, county, and development agency in the United States. The number of taxpayer-backed bonds in circulation is five times higher than only ten years ago. This means that the world’s largest financial firms now hold the purse strings for everything from essential services like sewage treatment plants to large-scale developments such as sports arenas. Municipal bonds are extremely profitable for investors because they are tax-exempt and, like mortgages, can be packaged into securities.

How Did We Get Here?

Part of the municipal debt story can be traced to New York City’s 1975 fiscal crisis, when the city almost defaulted on its debt. New York was able to avoid bankruptcy at the last moment by issuing guaranteed bonds backed by public pension funds. As a result, the Emergency Financial Control Board, the municipal body that controlled the city’s bank accounts, was in the position of rewriting the social contract, exerting control over labor at every level. Union leadership agreed to the deal because they feared a bankruptcy filing would void labor contracts. Only after the city had disciplined the unions did the federal government move in with rescue loans.

New York City had been debt-financed since the 1960s. But the fiscal crisis of 1975 inaugurated a new funding paradigm for distressed municipalities: taxpayer-backed debt is issued to service the debt already on the books. American municipalities are now increasingly financed not with public money, but with private loans, and the pace of this shift has accelerated since 2008. The Center on Budget Policy and Priorities recently reported that thirty-one states will face unsustainable budget gaps in 2013.

Few public assets are safe from Wall Street’s profit imperative. Public transportation has long been a cash cow for investors. Since 2008, the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has lost over $600 million as a result of interest rate swaps with JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, and other big banks. As a result, thousands of transit workers have lost their jobs and hundreds of bus and subway lines have been cut. That is not enough to satisfy the bond market. In March 2013 New York transit riders can expect a new round of fare hikes. Most subway and bus riders are working-class New Yorkers, immigrants, and people of color. They will soon pay even more for the privilege of lining Jamie Dimon’s pockets.

The MTA is not the only municipal organization in the country that runs on debt. The Refund Transit Coalition, a public transportation advocacy group, has uncovered at least 1,100 of these swaps at more than 100 government agencies costing taxpayers $2.5 billion a year. None is more indebted than Boston’s Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA). The story is a familiar one: in 2000 state legislators ended most public subsidies for the MBTA, which was additionally saddled with almost $2 billion in debt, much of it left over from the infamous Big Dig. Wall Street was happy to provide loans so the MBTA could maintain the system’s aging infrastructure and finance expansions.

Twelve years later, Boston’s transit authority spends 33 cents of every dollar it takes in to service its debt. Lawmakers, who have learned the lessons of Scranton all too well, are unwilling to challenge Wall Street. Instead, they have proposed cutting services and raising fares by as much as 43 percent. No one believes this represents a long-term solution. As one Occupy Boston activist noted bostonoccupier.com/boston-fare… , “the MBTA has never even asked the banks and bondholders who continue to profit from the [transit system’s] enormous debt to take a similar cut, effectively giving the banks a ‘free ride,’ while forcing T riders—working people, the unemployed, students, seniors, and the disabled—to bear more of the burden.”

Increasing debt loads, along with other neoliberal policies demanding that municipalities do more with less, put cities under enormous pressure to promote private economic growth in lieu of spending public funds on public goods. This imperative is one reason that city officials have pursued controversial development strategies such as declaring a parcel of land “blighted” to allow it to be seized by eminent domain and auctioned to the highest bidder. For example, the Barclays Center, the new arena for the Brooklyn Nets, was built partially on land that was condemned before being transferred to a developer. Cities also generate revenue by leasing public assets to the private sector. In Chicago, for example, the Skyway toll road has been leased to a private company for ninety-nine years. Atlanta even privatized the city water supply, only to cancel the contract years later when residents complained about tainted water.

As the privatization of everything from land to transportation makes clear, taxpayers rarely have a direct say in which bonds are issued and which public assets are sold out from under them. But with municipalities guaranteeing loans by promising that bondholders will be repaid with tax dollars or revenue generated by the debt-funded project, taxpayers are often left footing the bill.

Meanwhile, it remains nearly impossible for municipalities to cancel bond deals. By law, most states cannot declare bankruptcy. And, in many cases, federal bankruptcy codes guarantee that creditors will be repaid. In 1994, Orange County, California declared bankruptcy to repair the damage done when its treasurer took out loans on behalf of the city and then lost $1.6 billion in the securities market. Following what was then the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history, the county still paid its bondholders to avoid a tarnished credit rating. Another California city, Stockton, has been implementing severe austerity measures ever since the housing market tanked in 2008 in order to make payments to bondholders. The city cut 25 percent of its police officers, 30 percent of its firefighters, and over 40 percent of all other city employees. The crime rate in Stockton has skyrocketed and unemployment surged, and the city is now considering cutting pension benefits for retirees to pay its debts. The capital of the Golden State, Sacramento, has also cut its police force, by 30 percent, to fill a budget gap, and has seen a similar rise in crime—gun violence, rapes, and robberies have increased dramatically. Communities long ago abandoned by the state are also suffering from austerity. Camden, New Jersey, one of the poorest cities in the United States, recently privatized its police force, laying off officers and canceling union contracts. Today, the Camden police force often does not have the numbers to respond to crimes that don’t involve murder or serious injury.

As cities like Scranton seek to eliminate unsustainable debts, investors grow more demanding. Bond insurers involved in bankruptcy negotiations in Stockton and San Bernardino have even suggested that bondholders have a claim to CalPERS, the retirement fund for California’s public workers. Though the retirement system is constitutionally protected, this is a troubling development because bondholders’ demands are almost always given priority. A recent CBO report www.cbo.gov/publication/21966 noted that “of the 18,400 municipal bond issuers rated by Moody’s Investors Service from 1970 to 2009, only 54 defaulted during that period.” Bonds are bets that banks don’t lose.

Though the debt financing of U.S. cities is not illegal, that doesn’t mean deals are made fairly and transparently. We recently learned that interest rates around the world have been manipulated for years for the benefit of a few firms. Yet the LIBOR scandal is not surprising when one considers that municipal interest rate fraud has been going on for years with no public outcry. In his report on municipal bond rigging in Rolling Stone, Matt Taibbi explained www.rollingstone.com/politics/… how Wall Street has “skimmed untold billions” from hundreds of municipalities—and how they continued to invest in bonds even after they were caught. “Get busted for welfare fraud even once in America, and good luck getting so much as a food stamp ever again,” Taibbi wrote. “Get caught rigging interest rates in 50 states, and the government goes right on handing you billions of dollars in public contracts.” The debt financing of municipal government is an activity promoted and protected by the regulatory arm of the federal government.

What Can Be Done?

Strike Debt, a group (of which I am a member) inspired by Occupy Wall Street, has begun to address municipal bonds as part of a larger critique of debt as a system of wealth extraction. Strike Debt asserts that debt is a primary mechanism through which the 1 percent profits from the 99 percent. Debt affects everyone, especially those who are too poor to access low-interest credit. And Wall Street is the primary culprit. Framing municipal debt as part of a global system poses significant opportunities for organizers because it connects anti-austerity movements abroad to debt resistance efforts at home. Once we reframe debt as a problem that affects us all—as municipal debt obviously does—it becomes easier to imagine that we have enormous power to withdraw our consent.

Strike Debt’s analysis of debt as a system of wealth extraction is also a critique of capitalism. Municipal debt is more than just another example of Wall Street greed and local corruption. It may be the biggest scandal yet because it is not a scandal it all. U.S. cities, towns, and districts are now increasingly debt financed, which means they cannot operate without access to the credit markets controlled by the big banks. This illustrates that Wall Street’s class war against cities cannot be mitigated with more regulation. In fact, the SEC protects investors, not municipalities, from the consequences of bond deals gone bad. Even renegotiating debt often requires new loans. “When muni bond issuers unwind deals and pay enormous exit fees to Wall Street,” the New York Times recently reported www.nytimes.com/2012/08/05/bus… , “they typically issue new debt to do so. In recent years, for example, New York State has paid $243 million to terminate such transactions; $191 million was financed by new debt issuance.” Raiding cities for wealth, which produces a cycle of indebtedness, is not illegal or unusual. It is simply the way Wall Street does business.

The idea that some debts cannot and should not be paid is gaining traction. In 2011, for example, Jefferson County, Alabama declared bankruptcy (the largest in U.S. history) to rid itself of $4 billion in debt, much of it issued by corrupt officials to finance a sewer project that left people in a predominantly low-income, African-American community without a functioning sewer. Some do not want to renegotiate the debt. Instead, they reject it outright. As one Occupy activist in Birmingham noted www.nytimes.com/2012/02/19/bus… , “[the debt] shouldn’t ever have been issued, and therefore it shouldn’t exist. It shouldn’t have been spent. Since it shouldn’t have existed, we’re not going to pay it.” This statement could become a slogan for debt resistance movements across the country because it insists that debtors are a class, a collective “we” that can decide when enough is enough.

Some municipalities are fighting back, too. After their pay was cut to minimum wage, Scranton’s municipal unions sued the city, and their wages were restored. Baltimore, a city where more than 80 percent of school children qualify for free- or reduced-price lunch, is suing more than a dozen big banks for manipulating LIBOR, the benchmark for interest rates on many financial products. In July, a group called Boston Fare Strike declared a Free Fare Day and held turnstiles open for subway riders to protest fare hikes that enrich the 1 percent. Activists in Chicago are organizing community debt audits with the goal of identifying illegitimate debts that must be abolished. And finally, in a case that has gained national attention, Oakland, CA is trying to sever its relationship with Goldman Sachs for good. In the late 1990s, Oakland issued $187 million in bonds as part of an interest-rate swap. After the credit markets froze in 2008, Oakland could no longer make its payments to Goldman. The city council voted to cancel the deal, though Goldman insists the city must pay. CEO Lloyd Blankfein explained his firm’s unwillingness to let Oakland out of its contract. “The fact of the matter is,” he said www.forbes.com/sites/halahtour… , “we’re a bank.”

Blankfein is not wrong. Plundering U.S. cities is what large financial firms do. This is a troubling reality. A bankruptcy attorney featured on the NBC News report about Scranton offered this grim assessment: cutting worker pay is necessary to avoid “more drastic measures.” The reporter didn’t explain this statement, leaving viewers to imagine what terrible fate awaits those who don’t accept the reigning neoliberal orthodoxy that city budgets must be balanced by cutting worker pay, gutting public services, and issuing more debt to profit the 1 percent.

In fact, it is Wall Street that should be afraid of any disruption to business as usual. The cycle of debt illustrates that we cannot fix the problem through austerity. This tactic only deepens the devastation, since low wages further erode the tax base for cities, leaving them vulnerable to predatory lenders. It’s difficult to imagine how the debt financing of American cities could be scaled back without completely rethinking our economic system. Strike Debt is making the case that, in the United States as in Europe, the solution lies not in austerity but in investing in a genuine commons and in providing equitable access to public resources. These are precisely the “drastic measures” alluded to on NBC News. The question we must ask is, drastic for whom?


By Ann Larson, an organizer of Strike Debt, a teacher, a writer, and a resident of Brooklyn.  From Dissent Magazine www.dissentmagazine.org/online…
Related content
Comments: 5

autogestion [2012-12-06 21:29:58 +0000 UTC]

allowing the wealthy to buy power

[link]

there s one tie that binds lucas papademos in greece
henry paulsen in the united states
and mark carney in the u k

and that s goldman sachs
all were former bankers and executives at the wall street giant
all assumed prominent positions of power
and all played a hand after the global financial meltdown of 2007-08
thus making sure goldman sachs weathered the storm and made significant profits in the process

as europe descends into an austerity induced economic crisis
goldman sachs s people are managing the demise of the continent
the technocrats currently steering or who have steered post crash fiscal policy in greece
germany
italy
belgium
france
and now the uk
all hail from goldman sachs
in fact
the head of the european central bank itself
mario draghi
was the former managing director of goldman sachs international

in 2001
goldman sachs secretly helped greece hide billions of dollars through the use of complex financial instruments like credit default swaps
this allowed greece to meet the baseline requirements to enter the eurozone
but it also created a debt bubble that would later explode
but always looking ahead
goldman protected itself from this debt bubble by betting against greek bonds
expecting that they would eventually fail

the man who headed up the central bank of greece while this deal was being arranged with goldman was
drumroll please
lucas papademos

the normal scenario usually involves helping a nation hide a problem and sell its debt
until the problem blows up into a bubble that bursts in a spectacular way
goldman sachs then puts their man into a position of power to direct the bailouts so that goldman gets all its money back and more
while the nation s economy gets gutted

why have thousands of homeowners in the united states turned to suicide
domestic violence
and even mass murder when faced with home foreclosure
when a simple solution like rewriting mortgages
which f d r did successfully
could put an end to the bloodshed and misery

it s because rewriting mortgages would force banks like goldman sachs to take a hit

why have banksters at goldman sachs and other wall street institutions not been thrown in jail for defrauding customers
manipulating libor interest rates
and throwing thousands of americans out of their homes in a massive robo signing scandal

it s because we have a two tiered justice system in which those in power
like goldman sachs executives
get a slap on the wrist when they steal $50 billion
but people like you and me go to jail for stealing a 7-11 slurpee

we have an economy that s geared to exploit working people for goldman sachs

trader alessio rastani told the b b c
we don t really care about having a fixed economy
having a fixed situation
our job is to make money from it
personally i ve been dreaming of this moment for three years
i go to bed every night and i dream of another recession

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

autogestion In reply to autogestion [2012-12-06 21:31:27 +0000 UTC]

oops
this is the right [link] xD

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

autogestion [2012-12-06 21:23:24 +0000 UTC]

the sociological question of our times
what percentage of the population is dumb enough to accept extinction

[link]

things are getting desperate
says chadziathanasiou
who clothed greek celebrities before he moved to the countryside
you hear all the time of people illegally clearing forests for firewood
it s horrible if you re a green like me

like most middle class europeans raised in cities
nature is a new world and one that does not come naturally to them
until last year both enjoyed successful careers in fashion and architecture
there was never a euro left over
we didn t think we could afford to go through another winter in athens

we thought if we try this out
living in a little stone house
we might be able to make ends meet
i m not used to chopping firewood and my body aches but then doing it this way
we only spend €300 on heating our home

after first felling pensioners and low income workers
greece s great economic crisis is now destroying the middle class
after relentless waves of austerity and tax rises that have seen their purchasing power drop by up to 50%
even doctors and lawyers are feeling the pinch
with many saying they cannot afford the 40% surcharge the government has slapped on heating oil

suicides have soared
with the public order minister saying that 3100 people had taken their own lives since the onset of the crisis
in a country that in 2009 had the lowest suicide rate in the e u

malaria
officially eliminated 40 years ago
had also made a comeback

schools and hospitals staff complain they not only do not have the money to heat classrooms and wards but even to purchase painkillers

people who once lived decently have seen their wages drop by 80%

the older generation has begun pawning heirlooms and jewellery to get through the winter

the further downward pressure on the middle class
to the point of disappearance
will radicalise it
and in so doing it will bring it closer to syriza
the only realistic alternative to immediately end austerity

extremism on left and right has risen
with the neo nazi golden dawn now the third biggest party with 12% in the polls

i am concerned that everyone is angry and that somehow this anger can be channelled in the wrong direction
i am worried about nazism
yes

all our friends have gone to england and holland mostly
we could easily go to new york where i d often attend shows and have lots of contacts but we want to give it a go here
greece is a beautiful country even if our politicians have destroyed it
come back in a year and see if we have survived

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

dazza1008 [2012-12-06 20:07:04 +0000 UTC]

Hope this isn't a terrible statement, but it makes me think that something CLOSER to communism would be better? At least, to spread the wealth around?

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

KnoFear [2012-12-05 22:13:51 +0000 UTC]

My county consistently makes the list of the ten richest counties every year, and yet our public funding for schools and other services are bone tight. We are seriously sitting on lots of money that can be taxed and invested, yet never do. While students around here complain they got iPads instead of Jaguars, our teachers make less than 40K a year. Oh, and we have a class size somewhere around 35 students. Ridiculous.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0