New York State Faces Worst Economic Hardship Since Great Depression

New York Governor David Paterson appeared on CNBC earlier today and warned that the state of New York is facing its worst economic hardship since the Great Depression. As a result of the crisis, New York state lawmakers were gathering for an emergency session. According to Governor Paterson:

• The state of New York is forecasting that Wall Street bonuses will be slashed 20% and capital gain losses will amount to 24% for the year.
Governor Paterson’s “personal fear” is that investment bank and brokerage bonuses will be slashed by up to 40%, and capital gains reduced by the same amount.
• Wall Street supplies New York with one out of every five tax dollars.
• The state of New York could potentially lose $1.7 billion from slumping profits on Wall Street.

The New York governor told CNBC:

This is a combination of events. I wouldn’t compare it to the Great Depression, but I can’t cite a time since that period where we have had this amount of stress on our economy.

Paterson pointed out just how bad the financial situation is:

In June 2007, the sixteen banks that pay the most taxes on their corporate earnings remitted $173 million dollars to the New York state treasury. This June, those same sixteen banks paid $5 million. That’s a 97% decrease over last year. I don’t know if people really are getting how severe this problem is in New York and the ancillary effect it will have on the rest of the states, and even our federal economy.

You can view the 8 minute 33 second interview here.

Even Worse Than King Kong

Source:

“NY State’s Economic Emergency”
CNBC, August 20, 2008

Sphere: Related Content