The Party’s Over in Alaska
The Partys Over in Alaska
With oil revenue off, Alaska may be out of savings in two years.
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Bloomberg Businessweek) On an early morning in late March, a Beechcraft turboprop plane takes off from Juneau, Alaska, the only U.S. state capital not accessible by road. As the aircraft heads north over Americas largest national forest to Fairbanks, 700 miles away, Alaska Governor Bill Walker yawns and stretches his long legs. Across the aisle, wrapped in a fleece blanket, sits his wife and closest adviser, Donna. Easter is coming up, and the two discuss what to include in their grandchildrens baskets. Donna suggests putting a $1 bill inside each plastic egg. A dollar each? the governor asks incredulously. Were in a budget crisis here.
Americas Last Frontier is in trouble. The 40-year oil boom that turned Alaska from a frigid backwater into one of the nations richest states is over. Not only have petroleum prices crashed, but Alaskas supply of crude is running out. Thirty years ago the state was pumping 2 million barrels a day, a quarter of all U.S. output. But over the past decade, the Prudhoe Bay oil field, once the largest in North America, has started to reach the end of its life. Alaskas output has fallen to 500,000 barrels a day, enough to fill only one-quarter of the capacity of the states main economic artery, the 800-mile Trans-Alaska Pipeline System.
With 90 percent of the general fund revenue tied to oil, the collapse has been devastating. Alaska, facing a $4 billion budget deficit, is one of four energy states that have slid into recession over the past year because of cheap oil. The states rainy day fund is burning through $11 million a day. If that keeps up, it will be out of emergency funds within two years.
The unenviable task of fixing this mess rests with Walker, a 65-year-old former carpenter who won the governors office by about 6,000 votes in 2014 as an independent after leaving the Republican Party. Walker came in with big plans that included expanding Medicaid and building a natural gas pipeline, all without raising taxes. Hes since had to switch to a proposal that rewrites the social compact at the heart of Alaska since it achieved statehood in 1959: Its 738,000 residents enjoy the countrys lowest tax burden and highest per capita rate of state spending. .............(more)
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-05-06/the-party-s-over-in-alaska