Pritzker, Mendoza celebrate Illinois credit rating upgrade from Fitch – WREX (Rockford)

“In addition to building up reserves, the state has also actively reduced various long-term and budgetary liabilities, most prominently its unpaid bills, and laid a more sustainable fiscal foundation,” said Fitch’s report on the upgrade. “Illinois reduced its accounts payable balance by approximately $1 billion over the course of fiscal 2023 to less than $500 million, a level the state has not seen in more than two decades and continuing a pattern of using unappropriated surpluses to pay down bills.”
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Pensions Paid First
2 years ago

Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to positive rating action/upgrade:Sustained progress toward structural balance and improved liability management, primarily through materially narrowing the wide gap between actual and actuarially determined pension contributions. So if we want to raise our rating further we will need to start paying more towards pensions and stop kicking the can down the road. Pay more now or pay even more later. Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to negative rating action/downgrade:Reversion to the previous pattern of irresolute and contentious fiscal decision-making, which could include delayed budgets with unsustainable fiscal measures such as deeper… Read more »

Pensions Paid First
2 years ago

…with a long record of structural imbalance primarily related to pension underfunding offset by continued progress towards more sustainable budgeting practices

The bar has been set so low that putting together balanced budgets (even without actuarial pension payments) puts Illinois in a stronger ratings class. Better than the past governor that didn’t even want to pass a budget.

Pensions Paid First
2 years ago

Long-term liabilities are an elevated but still moderate burden on Illinois’ significant resource base. 

That’s right. Illinois has a significant resource base that is strong enough to handle our moderate pension burden. The state has a strong tax base and plenty of room to further raise taxes.

Riverbender
2 years ago

Fitch of course bases its ratings upon how well can a State pay its debt back. Illinois has an excellent way to pay the bills too; you are standing on it. Illinois has the power to confiscate via taxes all that it needs to pay the bills. Do you feel better now?

Pensions Paid First
2 years ago
Reply to  Riverbender

That’s the point RB. The ratings agencies know that Illinois has vast ability to tax and cover the states debts. They don’t buy into the everyone is leaving the state and no one will be left to pay mantra that so many uninformed people try to claim.

Old Spartan
2 years ago

Wahoo! We paid off the credit card bill for $1 billion, and the unfunded pension obligations went up by $8 billion. So I guess for Fitch (who by the way gets a six figure plus annual credit maintenance fee from -guess who?) that’s pretty good math. Such a great scam these rating agencies so successfully have maintained for decades. They are complicit in duping the public about the real state of the fiscal problems of Illinois– all for a crummy little annual fee.

Robert L. Peters
2 years ago

At one time I had a lot of credit card debt and a decent credit score, always paid on time which helped. A new job and a few years later I received a BIG bonus that allowed me to pay off all my credit cards. Shortly after my score went up to 820. I still get those big bonuses which pays for kids college, weddings etc. Illinois received their “COVID Bonus” and got some credit upgrades. Unlike me Illinois is not going to keep getting those COVID bonuses. Case in point who’s going to pay for the migrants and their… Read more »

fed up neighbor
2 years ago

The picture is not all roses, as it’s been stated it’s nothing but accounting gimmicks, shuffle here, shuffle there. There’s not one damn good thing about this shithole state and the communist jelly belly in Springfield.

Last edited 2 years ago by fed up neighbor
Ex Illini
2 years ago

Ah yes, paying down the bills you owe, what a triumph. Now tell me about those unfunded pension and benefits liabilities again. How many billions are those? Thought so.

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Mark Glennon on AM560’s Morning Answer: Chicago pension buyout plan mostly shifts debt rather than eliminating it, property tax surge doubles inflation over three decades

Chicago’s political leadership is floating a pension buyout program as evidence it is seriously addressing the city’s thirty-six-billion-dollar unfunded pension liability, but Mark Glennon, founder of the Illinois policy research organization Wirepoints, said that the proposal moves debt from one column to another rather than reducing it, and that the broader fiscal picture facing the city continues to deteriorate across every measurable dimension. Audio here.

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