Funding
infrastructure through bonds doubles the price or worse. Costs can be
cut in half by being your own bankster.
“The numbers are big. There is sticker shock,” said Jason Peltier, deputy manager of the Westlands Water District, describing Governor Jerry Brown’s plan to build two massive water tunnels through the California Delta. “But consider your other scenarios. How much more groundwater can we pump?”
Whether the tunnels are the
best way to get water to the Delta is controversial, but the issue here
is the cost. The tunnels were billed to voters as a $25 billion project.
That estimate, however, omitted interest and fees. Construction itself
is estimated at a relatively modest $18 billion. But financing through
bonds issued at 5% for 30 years adds $24-40 billion to the tab. Another
$9 billion will go to wetlands restoration, monitoring and other costs,
bringing the grand total to $51-67 billion – three or four times the
cost of construction.
A general rule for government bonds is that they double the cost of projects, once interest has been paid.
The San Francisco Bay Bridge earthquake retrofit was originally slated to cost $6.3 billion,
but that was just for salaries and physical materials. With interest
and fees, the cost to taxpayers and toll-payers will be over $12
billion.
The bullet train from San Francisco to Los Angeles, another pet project of Jerry Brown and his administration, involves a bond issue approved in 2008 for $10 billion. But when interest and fees are added, $19.5 billion will have to be paid back on this bond, doubling the cost.
And those heavy charges pale in
comparison to the financing of “capital appreciation bonds.” As with
the “no interest” loans that became notorious in the subprime mortgage
crisis, the borrower pays only the principal for the first few years.
But interest continues to compound; and after several decades, it can
amount to ten times principal or more.
San Diego County taxpayers will pay $1 billion after 40 years for $105 million raised for the Poway Unified School District.
Folsom Cordova used capital
appreciation bonds to finance $514,000. The sticker price after interest
and fees will be $9.1 million.
In 2013, state lawmakers
restricted debt service on capital appreciation bonds to four times
principal and limited their term to 25 years. But that still means that
financiers receive four times the cost of the project itself – the sort
of return considered usurious when we had anti-usury laws with teeth.
Escaping the Interest Trap: The Models of China and North Dakota
California needs $700 billion in infrastructure over
the next decade, and the state doesn’t have that sort of money in its
general fund. Where will the money come from? Proposals include more
private investment, but that means the privatization of what should have
been public assets. Infrastructure is touted to investors as the next “fixed income.” But
fixed income to investors means perpetual payments by taxpayers and
rate-payers for something that should have been public property.
There is another alternative.
In the last five years, China has managed to build an impressive 4000
miles of high-speed rail. Where did it get the money? The Chinese
government has a hidden funding source: it owns its own banks. That means it gets its financing effectively interest-free.
All banks actually have a hidden funding source. The Bank of England just admitted in
its quarterly bulletin that banks don’t lend their deposits. They
simply advance credit created on their books. If someone is going to be
creating our national money supply and collecting interest on it, it
should be we the people, through our own publicly-owned banks.
Models for this approach are
not limited to China and other Asian “economic miracles.” The US has its
own stellar model, in the state-owned Bank of North Dakota (BND). By
law, all of North Dakota’s revenues are deposited in the BND, which is
set up as a DBA of the state (“North Dakota doing business as the Bank
of North Dakota”). That means all of the state’s capital is technically
the bank’s capital. The bank uses its copious capital and deposit pool
to generate credit for local purposes.
The BND is a major money-maker
for the state, returning a sizable dividend annually to the state
treasury. Every year since the 2008 banking crisis, it has reported a
return on investment of between 17 percent and 26 percent. While
California and other states have been slashing services and raising
taxes in order to balance their budgets, North Dakota has actually been lowering taxes, something it has done twice in the last five years.
The BND partners with local
banks rather than competing with them, strengthening their capital and
deposit bases and allowing them to keep loans on their books rather than
having to sell them off to investors or farm the loans out to Wall
Street. This practice allowed North Dakota to avoid the subprime crisis
that destroyed the housing market in other states.
North Dakota has the lowest
unemployment rate in the country, the lowest default rate on credit card
debt, one of the lowest foreclosure rates, and the most local banks per
capita of any state. It is also the only state to escape the credit
crisis altogether, boasting a budget surplus every year since 2008.
Consider the Possibilities
The potential of this public
banking model for other states is huge. California’s population is more
than 50 times that of North Dakota. California has over $200 billion
stashed in a variety of funds identified in its 2012 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (CAFR), including $58 billion managed by the Treasurer in a Pooled Money Investment Account earning a meager 0.264% annually. California also has over $400 billion in its pension funds (CalPERS and CalSTRS).
This money is earmarked for
specific purposes and cannot be spent on the state budget, but it can be
invested. A portion could be invested as equity in a state-owned bank,
and a larger portion could be deposited in the bank as interest-bearing
certificates of deposit. This huge capital and deposit base could then
be leveraged by the bank into credit, something all banks do. Since the
state would own the bank, the interest would return to the state.
Infrastructure could be had interest-free, knocking 50% or more off the
sticker price.
By doing its own financing
in-house, the state can massively expand its infrastructure without
imposing massive debts on future generations. The Golden State can
display the innovation and prosperity that makes it worthy of the name
once again.
Edited by WD
Edited by WD
Source
X art by WB7
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