Friday, May 21, 2010

32 US States Now Bankrupt

Courtesy of Economic Policy Journal we now know that the majority of American states are currently insolvent, and that the US Treasury has been conducting a shadow bailout of at least 32 US states. Over 60% of Americans receiving state unemployment benefits are getting these directly from the US government, as 32 states have now borrowed $37.8 billion from Uncle Sam to fund unemployment insurance. The states in most dire condition, are, not unexpectedly, the unholy trifecta of California ($6.9 billion borrowed), Michigan ($3.9 billion), and New York ($3.2 billion). With this form of shadow bailout occurring, one can only wonder how many other shadow programs are currently in operation to fund states under the table with federal money.The full list of America's 32 insolvent states is below, sorted in order of bankruptedness.

California $6,900
Michigan 3,900
New York 3,200
Penn. 3,000
Ohio 2,300
Illinois 2,200
N.C. 2,100
Indiana 1,700
New Jersey 1,700
Florida 1,600
Wisconsin 1,400
Texas 1,000
S.C. 886
Kentucky 795
Missouri 722
Connecticut 498
Minnesota 477
Georgia 416
Nevada 397
Mass. 387
Virginia 346
Arkansas 330
Alabama 283
Colorado 253
R.I. 225
Idaho 202
Maryland 133
Kansas 88
Vermont 33
S.D. 24
Tennessee 21
Virgin Islands 13
Delaware 12

Comments (3)

Loading... Logging you in...
  • Logged in as
So, does anyone know if this has ever happened before? Call me lazy if you must. Would also be interested in knowing which have sales tax verses income tax.
2 replies · active 779 weeks ago
The Following states have no sales tax:
Alaska
Delaware
Montana
New Hampshire
Oregon

The following states have no Income tax:
Alaska
Florida
Nevada
South Dakota
Tennessee (State income tax limited to dividends and interest income only)
Texas
Washington
Wyoming

Here is the website where I got the Information http://www.taxadmin.org/fta/rate/tax_stru.html#In...

Hope that helps.
Thanks, Roman, that was very nice of you. So, there are no states that operate on income tax verses sales, on the list at all. There are five that are sales tax only, on the list. Is there a correlation? I know here in Oregon I pay 25 times more in state income then I ever would in sales.

Post a new comment

Comments by