Posted on 02/04/2014 10:28:19 AM PST by MichCapCon
Much has been said recently about student college debt, now averaging nearly $30,000 per pupil nationally. But thats not the only debt being carried around.
Total debt to taxpayers has also been skyrocketing in recent years.
The liabilities of state governments, largely driven by underfunded pension and retiree health care costs, have been accumulating rapidly. According to the State Data Lab produced by the Chicago-based Truth in Accounting, Michigan has the fifth highest amount of debt per person when considering student loans and taxpayer burden.
Michigan per-taxpayer burden, 2009-2012 "Students should be told the truth about debt states are accumulating for them to pay, just as the amount of their college loans is disclosed to them," said Donna Rook, president of StateDataLab.org at Truth in Accounting.
Truth in Accounting calculates available Michigan assets at $22.7 billion (without restricted and capital assets), and liabilities (without capital liabilities) at $97.7 billion, meaning each taxpayer has a financial burden of $25,300. College graduates in Michigan have an average student debt of $28,840. The state's taxpayer financial burden was $15,800 per tax paying citizen in 2009.
When adding up liabilities, Truth in Accounting considers all assets (cash, investments, and money in fund accounts) and total bills ("liabilities disclosed in a state's financial report such as accounts payable, bonded indebtedness (bonds), and pension and Other Post-Employment Benefit (OPEB) obligations found in the state's and its retirement systems Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs)). Note: The Supreme Court has ruled that OPEB obligations can be altered.
The states with the highest debt burden are Connecticut, New Jersey, Illinois, Hawaii and Michigan. There are seven states with a taxpayer surplus (where assets are greater than liabilities): Alaska, Wyoming, North Dakota, Utah, Nebraska, Tennessee and South Dakota.
MT may get right with the peeps soon.
There are probably as many taxpayer funded jobs in Michigan as there are people in Montana.
You left out the subtitle: Budget Burden $0 for Non-taxpayers.
I think Wyo. is the best represented State in the House, Mont. the worst.
Won’t be moving there.
I think it is great that states continue to have the freedom to roll up debt by overpaying its govt employees, forcing unions onto its companies and rolling out the welfare wagon.
They have that right.
I do not have an abligation to have to pay for their profligate activities.
Michigan’s productive citizens are welcome in Texas.
Thanks to all of the Cali refugees in Montana it is going to be along road to sanity for Montana.
Fortunately for us it isn’t the productive people leaving Michigan these days. In fact there have been a couple of Texas tech companies that have opened shop here in recent months.
that is good to here
maybe the vagrants are assimilating in CA
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