In the Weekly Standard, David Skeel
presents a plan for forestalling bailouts of insolvent states
such as California and Illinois: state bankruptcies:
When taxpayer-funded bailouts are inserted into the equation,
the case for a new bankruptcy chapter becomes overwhelming. And
it’s a case for Congress to move now on the creation of a state
bankruptcy law.
With the presidential election just two years away, the pressure
to bail out California, Illinois, and perhaps other states is about
to become irresistible. As we learned in 2008 and 2009, it is
impossible to stop a bailout once the government decides to go this
route. The rescue of Bear -Stearns in 2008 was achieved through a
“lockup” of its sale to JPMorgan Chase that flagrantly violated
corporate merger law. To bail out Chrysler and General Motors, the
government used funds that were only authorized for “financial
institutions,” and illegally commandeered the bankruptcy process to
give the car companies a helping hand. There is, in short, no law
that will stop the federal government from bailing out profligate
state governments like those in California or Illinois if it
chooses to do so.
PattyMor| 11.29.10 @ 4:11PM
No to any bailout. I live in the People's Republic of Illinois and I don't want any bailouts. Let the people who cause the problems, stew in their own juices.
jrjr| 11.29.10 @ 4:19PM
No bailout for Kalifornia. It has been spending like a drunken green tool for a few decades. Sell it to Mehiko for 30 pieces of silver.