States and localities owe far, far more than their citizens know.
Since Pappas began her project to tally Cook County’s hidden debt, she
has found lots of company. Across America, elected officials, taxpayer
groups, and other researchers have launched a forensic accounting of
state and municipal debt, and their fact-finding mission is rewriting
the country’s balance sheet. Just a few years ago, most experts
estimated that state and local governments owed about $2.5 trillion,
mostly in the form of municipal bonds and other debt securities. But
late last year, the States Project, a joint venture of Harvard’s
Institute of Politics and the University of Pennsylvania’s Fels
Institute of Government, projected that if you also count promises made
to retired government workers and money borrowed without taxpayer
approval, the figure might be higher than $7 trillion.
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