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  • Well, this is about state budgets.

  • This is probably the most boring topic

  • of the whole morning.

  • But I want to tell you, I think it's an important topic

  • that we need to care about.

  • State budgets

  • are big, big money --

  • I'll show you the numbers --

  • and they get very little scrutiny.

  • The understanding is very low.

  • Many of the people involved

  • have special interests or short-term interests

  • that get them not thinking

  • about what the implications of the trends are.

  • And these budgets

  • are the key for our future;

  • they're the key for our kids.

  • Most education funding --

  • whether it's K through 12,

  • or the great universities or community colleges --

  • most of the money for those things

  • is coming out of these state budgets.

  • But we have a problem.

  • Here's the overall picture.

  • U.S. economy is big --

  • 14.7 trillion.

  • Now out of that pie,

  • the government spends 36 percent.

  • So this is combining the federal level,

  • which is the largest,

  • the state level and the local level.

  • And it's really in this combined way

  • that you get an overall sense of what's going on,

  • because there's a lot of complex things

  • like Medicaid and research money

  • that flow across those boundaries.

  • But we're spending 36 percent.

  • Well what are we taking in?

  • Simple business question.

  • Answer is 26 percent.

  • Now this leaves 10 percent deficit,

  • sort of a mind-blowing number.

  • And some of that, in fact, is due to the fact

  • that we've had an economic recession.

  • Receipts go down,

  • some spending programs go up,

  • but most of it is not because of that.

  • Most of it is because of ways

  • that the liabilities are building up

  • and the trends,

  • and that creates a huge challenge.

  • In fact, this is the forecast picture.

  • There are various things in here:

  • I could say we might raise more revenue,

  • or medical innovation will make the spending even higher.

  • It is an increasingly difficult picture,

  • even assuming the economy does quite well --

  • probably better than it will do.

  • This is what you see

  • at this overall level.

  • Now how did we get here?

  • How could you have a problem like this?

  • After all, at least on paper,

  • there's this notion that these state budgets are balanced.

  • Only one state says

  • they don't have to balance the budget.

  • But what this means actually

  • is that there's a pretense.

  • There's no real, true balancing going on,

  • and in a sense, the games they play to hide that

  • actually obscure the topic so much

  • that people don't see things

  • that are actually pretty straight-forward challenges.

  • When Jerry Brown was elected,

  • this was the challenge that was put to him.

  • That is, through various gimmicks and things,

  • a so-called balanced budget

  • had led him to have 25 billion missing

  • out of the 76 billion in proposed spending.

  • Now he's put together some thoughts:

  • About half of that he'll cut,

  • another half,

  • perhaps in a very complex set of steps,

  • taxes will be approved.

  • But even so,

  • as you go out into those future years,

  • various pension costs, health costs go up enough,

  • and the revenue does not go up enough.

  • So you get a big squeeze.

  • What were those things that allowed us to hide this?

  • Well, some really nice little tricks.

  • And these were somewhat noticed.

  • The paper said, "It's not really balanced.

  • It's got holes.

  • It perpetuates deficit spending.

  • It's riddled with gimmicks."

  • And really when you get down to it,

  • the guys at Enron never would have done this.

  • This is so blatant,

  • so extreme.

  • Is anyone paying attention

  • to some of the things these guys do?

  • They borrow money.

  • They're not supposed to, but they figure out a way.

  • They make you pay more in withholding

  • just to help their cash flow out.

  • They sell off the assets.

  • They defer the payments.

  • They sell off the revenues from tobacco.

  • And California's not unique.

  • In fact, there's about five states that are worse

  • and only really four states

  • that don't face this big challenge.

  • So it's systemic across the entire country.

  • It really comes from the fact

  • that certain long-term obligations --

  • health care, where innovation makes it more expensive,

  • early retirement and pension, where the age structure gets worse for you,

  • and just generosity --

  • that these mis-accounting things

  • allow to develop over time,

  • that you've got a problem.

  • This is the retiree health care benefits.

  • Three million set aside, 62 billion dollar liability --

  • much worse than the car companies.

  • And everybody looked at that

  • and knew that that was headed toward a huge problem.

  • The forecast for the medical piece alone

  • is to go from 26 percent of the budget

  • to 42 percent.

  • Well what's going to give?

  • Well in order to accommodate that,

  • you would have to cut education spending in half.

  • It really is this young versus the old

  • to some degree.

  • If you don't change that revenue picture,

  • if you don't solve what you're doing in health care,

  • you're going to be deinvesting in the young.

  • The great University of California university system,

  • the great things that have gone on,

  • won't happen.

  • So far it's meant layoffs,

  • increased class sizes.

  • Within the education community there's this discussion of,

  • "Should it just be the young teachers who get laid off,

  • or the less good teachers who get laid off?"

  • And there's a discussion: if you're going to increase class sizes,

  • where do you do that? How much effect does that have?

  • And unfortunately, as you get into that, people get confused and think,

  • well maybe you think that's okay.

  • In fact, no, education spending should not be cut.

  • There's ways, if it's temporary,

  • to minimize the impact,

  • but it's a problem.

  • It's also really a problem for where we need to go.

  • Technology has a role to play.

  • Well we need money to experiment with that,

  • to get those tools in there.

  • There's the idea of paying teachers for effectiveness,

  • measuring them, giving them feedback,

  • taking videos in the classroom.

  • That's something I think is very, very important.

  • Well you have to allocate dollars

  • for that system

  • and for that incentive pay.

  • In a situation where you have growth,

  • you put the new money into this.

  • Or even if you're flat, you might shift money into it.

  • But with the type of cuts we're talking about,

  • it will be far, far harder

  • to get these incentives for excellence,

  • or to move over

  • to use technology in the new way.

  • So what's going on?

  • Where's the brain trust

  • that's in error here?

  • Well there really is no brain trust.

  • (Laughter)

  • It's sort of the voters. It's sort of us showing up.

  • Just look at this spending.

  • California will spend over 100 billion,

  • Microsoft, 38,

  • Google, about 19.

  • The amount of IQ in good numeric analysis,

  • both inside Google and Microsoft

  • and outside, with analysts and people of various opinions --

  • should they have spent on that?

  • No, they wasted their money on this. What about this thing? --

  • it really is quite phenomenal.

  • Everybody has an opinion.

  • There's great feedback.

  • And the numbers are used to make decisions.

  • If you go over the education spending and the health care spending --

  • particularly these long-term trends --

  • you don't have that type of involvement

  • on a number that's more important

  • in terms of equity, in terms of learning.

  • So what do we need to do?

  • We need better tools.

  • We can get some things out on the Internet.

  • I'm going to use my website

  • to put up some things that will give the basic picture.

  • We need lots more.

  • There's a few good books,

  • one about school spending and where the money comes from --

  • how that's changed over time, and the challenge.

  • We need better accounting.

  • We need to take the fact

  • that the current employees, the future liabilities they create,

  • that should come out of the current budget.

  • We need to understand why they've done the pension accounting

  • the way they have.

  • It should be more like private accounting.

  • It's the gold standard.

  • And finally, we need to really reward politicians.

  • Whenever they say there's these long-term problems,

  • we can't say, "Oh, you're the messenger with bad news?

  • We just shot you."

  • In fact, there are some like these:

  • Erskine Bowles, Alan Simpson and others,

  • who have gone through and given proposals

  • for this overall federal health-spending state-level problem.

  • But in fact, their work was sort of pushed off.

  • In fact, the week afterwards,

  • some tax cuts were done

  • that made the situation even worse

  • than their assumptions.

  • So we need these pieces.

  • Now I think this is a solvable problem.

  • It's a great country with lots of people.

  • But we have to draw those people in,

  • because this is about education.

  • And just look at what happened with the tuitions

  • with the University of California

  • and project that out for another three, four, five years --

  • it's unaffordable.

  • And that's the kind of thing --

  • the investment in the young --

  • that makes us great, allows us to contribute.

  • It allows us to do the art,

  • the biotechnology, the software

  • and all those magic things.

  • And so the bottom line is

  • we need to care about state budgets

  • because they're critical for our kids and our future.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Well, this is about state budgets.

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