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aggiesal

(8,910 posts)
Thu Nov 21, 2013, 12:14 PM Nov 2013

How Wall Street — not pensioners — wrecked Detroit

Source: Salon

By David Sirota
While clueless elites continue to blame "reckless public pensions," a new report tells a very different story.

In its house editorial yesterday, USA Today retold the now-accepted story of Detroit’s bankruptcy. Railing on “reckless public pensions,” the newspaper told its readers that the Motor City is “Exhibit A for municipal irresponsibility” because it allegedly “negotiated generous pensions” that were too lavish. In this fable, the average Detroit pensioner’s $19,000 a year stipend — which many get in lieu of Social Security — is somehow defined not only as excessive, but also as the primary cause of the city’s financial problems. Detroit, thus, becomes a weapon in the larger Plot Against Pensions, as the right holds it up as a cautionary tale supposedly showing that A) police officers, firefighters and sanitation workers are greedy and B) America cannot afford to fulfill negotiated agreements to pay public-sector workers a subsistence retirement benefit.

No doubt, there is a tiny grain of truth in this otherwise inaccurate story. Yes, it is true, Detroit is a cautionary tale for governments about financial management and legacy costs. However, it is not a cautionary tale about allegedly greedy employees living the MTV Cribs life off taxpayers. As an eye-opening new report from a former Goldman Sachs executive documents, it is instead yet another cautionary tale about Wall Street’s too-good-to-be-true schemes that end up being, well, too good to be true.

Commissioned by the think tank Demos, the new report out today from former investment banker Wallace Turbeville shows that contrary to the myths about a bloated municipal government overspending on lavish social services, Detroit’s “overall expenses have declined over the last five years” by $419 million thanks to the city “laying off more than 2,350 workers, cutting worker pay, and reducing future healthcare and future benefit accruals for workers.” Today, Turbeville notes that “Detroit has a significantly smaller workforce per capita than comparable cities.” Yet, those draconian cuts still left the city with an annual $198 million shortfall because of three big problems — none of which has anything to do with supposedly greedy public workers and their allegedly overly “generous” pension benefits.


Read more: http://www.salon.com/2013/11/20/how_wall_street_not_pensioners_wrecked_detroit/



I love stories like this because it exposes another side of the stories besides the talking points that are spread as gosple.
Good for David Sirota.
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How Wall Street — not pensioners — wrecked Detroit (Original Post) aggiesal Nov 2013 OP
Kick for exposure. Scuba Nov 2013 #1
Make Goldman pay for their fraud. Demeter Nov 2013 #2
K&R abelenkpe Nov 2013 #3
Kicked and recommended a whole bunch.....nt Enthusiast Nov 2013 #4
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