Credit: Chriseaves.com / Flick.com -- Creative Commons License When it comes to having lousy credit, Illinois under Quinn is No. 1By Scott Reeder | Special to Watchdog.org SPRINGFIELD – I remember my consumer education teacher at Galesburg High School explaining how to achieve a good credit rating. We learned that the worse your credit rating, the harder it is to borrow. And when people with bad credit do borrow, they pay a much higher interest rate.
Here are my teacher’s tips on having good credit:
If only our current state leadership could have sat through that class 30 years ago. Standard and Poor’s Rating Services just dropped Illinois’ credit rating to A- from A. There is not another state in the union with credit as lousy as ours. We are worse off than California.
We got in this predicament the same way a person with bad credit would.
Just consider:
And we are now just one more downgrade away from junk-bond status.
“It’s really important to remember that we have had 20 downgrades in the entire history of the state and 11 of them have been under Pat Quinn,” said state Senate GOP leader Christine Radogno. “We have seen a period of time here that we have been woefully lacking in leadership and the ability to get something done. I think that has led to the downgrade.”
It’s easy to dismiss percentage points and terms like “junk-bond status” as Wall Street concerns of little importance to the rest of us.
But paying higher interest rates on bonds may mean less money for schools, fewer state troopers patrolling highways and even longer lines when you renew your driver’s license.
More importantly, the feedback from rating agencies provides an independent voice giving a prognosis on our state’s financial health.
And that prognosis is clear. Illinois is CTD – circling the drain.
Illinois politicians like to trot out familiar bromides such as: “There are no easy solutions.”
There may not be easy solutions, but it’s worth noting that 49 states have found better ways to manage their finances than Illinois has.
Places like Kansas are actually considering eliminating state income taxes. Illinois lawmakers, on the hand, jacked up our tax rates 67 percent two years ago. Rhode Island has embraced pension reform while Illinois has dithered.
And before we start hearing that Illinois needs to raise its taxes again to improve its credit, please note that the state is taking in more tax revenue now than it has at any time in its 195-year history.
Yeah, you read that right.
We are taking in money at a steady clip, but still heading toward bankruptcy.
Illinois’ problems are on the spending front.
The credit rating agencies know it, and you should, too.
Scott Reeder is a senior contributing editor to Watchdog.org, veteran statehouse reporter and journalist in residence at the Illinois Policy Institute. Readers can subscribe to his free reports from the Springfield by going to REEDERREPORT.COM. Contact him at sreeder@illinoispolicy.org.
|
This content requires the latest Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript enabled.
Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.
Most Popular
75.0 F (23.9 C)
Fair
Pressure
:
1018.5 mb
Humidity
:
64 %
Wind
:
East at 3.5 MPH (3 KT)
What's on FOX Illinois Full Schedule11:00
Maury
12:00
Jerry Springer
1:00
The Steve Wilkos Show
2:00
The Jeremy Kyle Show
3:00
Steve Harvey
|
Add a comment
Most Popular