With the House of Representatives bringing in its “neutral” expert on defaulting on the 38 Studios moral
obligation bonds, the lingering question to me still remains. Why is it alright
to unilaterally bail out on our pension obligations to state employees, but our
“moral” obligations to bondholders who knew the risks must be honored at all
costs?
That was the question posed to Gov. Lincoln Chafee a month ago by
conservative columnist (writing then for Bloomberg View) Josh Barro. Chafee’s
never answered that fundamental question, and Barro rightly excoriated the
Governor for claiming to call for moderation when in fact he called for a more
radical version of pension reform than what was enacted.
But the question still remains; why are we valuing capital more
than labor here? These pensioners did their duty for the State, whether it was
operating its government, hunting down its criminals, taking care of its
people, or any of the other thousands of little things state employees do. In
exchange, beyond the wages it paid them, the State promised as well to ensure
they could take care of themselves in their retirement. Then, when it was
unwilling to pay for it, the State reneged on this promise; now it’s facing a
lawsuit.
The bondholders, on the other hand, provided the capital used to
pay for 38 Studios, a game company that spent poorly, was bad at managing its
money, failed to produce a profit, and ultimately left the State with a massive
financial hole. The State is promising to pay them their money back, with
interest.
The pensioners provided actual value to the State, the
bondholders did not. A question for 2014 for any elected official that suggests
we should pay back the 38 Studios bonds but voted for pension reform is to
explain how the bonds are more valuable than our state workers’ labor.
The simple political reality is that bondholders have simply
always been more powerful and dominant in state economic policy than its
workers; going back at least to the era immediately following the Revolutionary
War (a sobering thought as we approach Gaspee Days).
Even though paying back
the bonds will pull money out of Rhode Island’s economy, the bondholders will
suggest that they can cost the State even more money by damaging its credit
ratings. Sadly, these credit ratings are put out by the same agencies that said
that subprime mortgages were a top-tier investment… leading to the collapse in
the economy five years ago.
Ultimately, because it’s far easier to tabulate the value of
capital rather than services rendered over a worker’s career, our credit
ratings aren’t hurt when we spurn our obligations to pensioners. There’s no
doubt in my mind that we’re in the society that Ta-Nehisi Coates quotes Chris
Hayes as suggesting we’re in, one “that applies the principle of
accountability to the powerless and the principle of forgiveness to the
powerful.”
P.S. It’s also worth noting the words we use to describe the two
situations; we’re “defaulting” on our bonds, but merely “reforming” our
pensions. Maybe people against paying back the 38 Studios bonds should use the
phrase “bond reform.”
And for more on this topic, see RI Future posts by Mike
McDonald (Gina’s moral obligation Wall St not RI, April
7) and Bob Walsh (Pension lawsuit primer, June 26, ’12).
Samuel
G. Howard - A native-born Rhode Islander, educated in
Providence Public Schools, went to college in North Carolina and a political
junkie and pessimistic optimist.