Millions of dollars in new tax revenue earmarked for the University of California system as part of the state’s recently passed Proposition 30 will instead be routed to major financial firms, because of bad bets made by a Wall Street-influenced UC Board of Regents.
Over the last decade, tuition and fees for undergraduates in the UC system have tripled, adding enormous debt burdens to UC graduates and pushing lower-income students into the already overburdened state college and community college systems, or out of higher education altogether. Members of the UC Board of Regents, which governs the system and which approved the tuition hikes, have blamed the increases on the bad economy and on politicians.
However, according to a new report written by five doctoral students at UC Berkeley, in the years preceding the 2008 financial collapse, members of the Board of Regents themselves had overseen “a qualitative shift in the financial practices of the University of California” by employing the same kinds of exotic financial instruments that precipitated the meltdown on Wall Street — primarily, bond issuances hedged by interest rate swaps.
An interest rate swap is essentially a bet that interest rates will rise. UC would issue a bond with a variable interest rate, then make regular payments to a third party (typically an investment bank) based on an agreed-upon fixed interest rate. The bank would then pay back to UC a dividend based on the variable interest rate of the original bond, if the variable rate were higher than the fixed rate. If the variable rate were lower than the fixed rate, then the money would go the other way: UC would owe money to the investment bank.
Between 2003 and 2007, the report explains, UC acquired interest rate swaps with five investment banks in order to issue over $600 million in bonds to finance development of medical centers on three campuses. Medical schools and hospitals are major profit centers for universities. As UC used debt financing to expand these profit engines, tuitions for students continued to rise.
Since the risky contracts the Board of Regents entered into were made possible by the collateral afforded by UC student tuition costs and by the Board’s ability to jack up tuition and fees at its discretion, the same students whose ballooning debts and tuition payments to the university were making the UC system’s exotic financial bets possible were receiving no tuition relief from the university out of the profits generated by those bets.
The result of these complicated arrangements has become a familiar story since the 2008 meltdown. The Board of Regents’ pursuit of cheap money to increase UC profits left it exposed to the financial collapse. According to the report, UC’s risky bets have now cost it $57 million, which could rise to over $250 million over the next three decades. Between May 2007 and the end of last year, the Regents doubled UC’s debt load. The UC system is currently paying about three quarters of a million dollars per month to Wall Street firms as a result of the swaps.
Moreover, the LIBOR scandal earlier this year demonstrated that Wall Street bets against rising interest rates were in fact fixed by the banks. All of the interest rate swaps described in the report were based on variable rates determined by LIBOR. Through market manipulation by the banks, UC’s bets were guaranteed to be a raw deal for students, their families, taxpayers, faculty, university workers and anyone else associated with the university.
Like many other ripped-off institutional counterparties to LIBOR trades, UC has standing to sue the banks. But the Regents have not only failed to do so, they haven’t even tried to renegotiate the terms of their agreements, as other institutions have successfully done. The question is, why?
One possible answer is another sadly familiar story: The UC Board of Regents has become what the report describes as a “revolving door with Wall Street.” An increasing number of posts in top UC management and on the Board of Regents have been filled by former Wall Street bankers, the report explains, including a new CFO position created in 2009 and filled by Peter Taylor, who was the Managing Director of Public Finance for Lehman Brothers before he found himself out of a job following the firm’s spectacular collapse.
Monica Lozano, a UC Regent, also serves on the Board of Bank of America, a position for which she has received approximately $1.5 million. Bank of America stands to make as much as $28 million from an interest rate swap at UC San Francisco, according to the report. B of A is also one of the banks under investigation for LIBOR manipulation.
Proposition 30 was passed last week by California voters in part to stem the tide of perpetual tuition hikes and the rapid decline of public higher education in the state. But because of the Regents’ predilection for gambling with student tuition money, much of that new tax revenue will be routed away from tuition relief and toward the very Wall Street firms that — with the Regents’ help — created the financial crisis that accelerated the higher education crisis in California in the first place.
Since its founding, the UC system has always played a central role, both structural and symbolic, in making the California Dream possible. Over the last decade, it appears that the Regents leveraged that dream to make the UC system a player in Wall Street’s casino economy. As with any casino, the game was fixed. Now the rest of us are being forced to pay for their mistakes.
(Leighton Woodhouse is a partner and co-founder of Dog Park Media and Communications Director of the National Union of Healthcare Workers. His post first appeared on Firedoglake.com. Retrieved from City Watch.)
I TOLD YOU SO!!!!!! Dummies just WOULDN’T LISTEN!!!!!
That’s right! We told them and they are too ignorant to vote, or just too selfish and hooked on the government paycheck. Unbelievable!!!!
If you would actually all read the actual proposition carefully (with all the big words) you will see exactly why the money gleaned can not be used for all the scary stories you are concluding from that one article and alot of people’s fears. Unfortunately most people listen to the TV ads and other people’s scare tactics instead of educating themselves on the actual facts in print in your voting packages and booklets. Stop whining and complaining and spreading false comments and console yourselves with the actual written words that legally must be followed.
You will feell much better and talk to a few teachers too.
The ole liberal bait and switch yet again. California democrats will NEVER learn. Welcome to your hell you stupid morons. You’re too stupid to be in college. Go get a job at Mikey D’s where you belong.
It’s *Mickey D’s you ignorant military pawn.
Mickey D’s**
I predicted that the new taxes (Prop. 30) wouldn’t benefit the schools. It was just another way to help Jerry “balance the budget” (which it won’t.) I can’t believe Prop. 30 passed! Will people ever learn? I’m steaming over this.
Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Students Get Shafted: Millions of dollars in new tax revenue earma… http://t.co/mu79T3Ow #tcot
I think the Board of Regents has become the Board of REGRETS!
Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Students Get Shafted http://t.co/3EOj0Oee
Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Stu… http://t.co/cgcseVw0
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/top-stories/prop-30-funds-headed-for-wall-street-not-students/
Wow! I sure didn’t see this coming. As much as I love this State and our great Country and worry about my kids and grand-kids future, I just can’t wait to see all this crap come tumbling down. The chickens will come home to roost all over our land. Hope there’s enough left for us to pick up the pieces when it’s over.
looks like Jerry B- got u again
IDIOTS, IDIOTS AND MORE IDIOTS.
Hom many times do you have to be screwed by these Progressives, read COMMUNISTS, before you are cured of rectumOctalItus. As long as you keep your head up and locked you will never recognize the world of the politicians as it really is…..
There are two kinds of people to a Crooked Politician. His fellow traveler and the Marks, we the people are the latter type, the MARK..
Ther name of the game is to lie, cheat or perform any magic trick imaginable to get the money, and then steal it away from view while you figure out the method of transferring it from those who gave it to those who will help you steal it.
Fools, You are all fools. Never, ever let a politician hold your money, for it will shortly disappear. All taxes are plunder to a politician……
The “RETARDS” that voted for Prop. 30 with the idea that it would
go to the education apparently were educated in the California
colleges and universities. No one else is THAT stupid!!!
I say “WE” need to hold those responsible for the MISmanagement
of public funds accountable. DEMAND their resignation or firing.
Moon Beam Brown sure won’t.
MULTIPLE LIES COMING FROM THE DEMOCRATIC MAJORITY ASSEMBLY IN THE SANCTUARY STATE.
Stephen Frank Stated on 11/14/2012 on California deficits as follows at http://capoliticalnews.com/
In the past two months, the cash deficit of the State has gone from $22.3 billion to $24.7 billion—just for the first four months of the year.
Plus the State OWES $12.5 billion to K-12 education
It owes $15 billion stolen from Trust Funds to cover cash deficit
It owes $10 billion BORROWED to cover the rest of the cash deficit. The State owes the Feds $10 billion for the loan to the unemployment insurance fund—so California can continue to send out unemployment checks.
That is a total of $71.5 billion—and there is more. Yet, the State claims “California faces a $1.9 billion deficit through June 2014, significantly smaller than in recent years after voters passed two tax initiatives last week, the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office said last Wednesday”
They claim we will have this small deficit, instead of $71 billion because of the $9 billion Prop. 30 is going to bring in, in new revenues! Any wonder our kids are illiterate—this is the math taught in our schools. Government lies—and tries to make you feel good about being insolvent.
Seems like marijuana must be legal in government offices, he has studied.
HOW MANY LEGISLATORS ARE BRAZENLY LYING ABOUT THE TRUE DEFICIT IN THE 50 STATES?
California has the highest population of illegal aliens who have settled there. Thousands of children of illegal alien parents gaining automatic citizenship and the cost is thrown at the taxpayers. Health care and other free handouts that are the right of citizens is being disbursed to anybody who sneaks across the border or steps off a plane. None of the 50 states is exempt from this silent attack on our country or the pilfering of their general treasuries. Now the Democrats have their majority public entitlements will be pouring out across the state to all the “Freeloader voters” the spongers and the people who have no intention of finding a job. Obviously there is an exception to this rule, whereas there are special needs people, the sick and handicapped in some form or other. There are the homeless veterans and plenty other others, but we have become an public assistance nation, but some of the 49 percent that Mitt Romney talked about have scrounged their way through life and allowed the taxpayers to carry them. A great number have figured a way to deceive the welfare system, which is a stain on the real workers. Because the system could easily be thwarted, with stolen ID, the elderly and the sick lose their major assistance to the scroungers. When we cannot truly look after our troops returning from the warzones and still have millions of homeless without hope, then why are we either bringing in millions of legal immigrants, other than highly skilled workers that are always welcome?
Why is not illegal entry a Felony? CAN ANYBODY ANSWER THAT QUESTION?
IS CALIFORNIA TAXPAYERS COMMITTED TO SUBSIDIZE ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS FOREVER?
BEFORE ANY PASSAGE OF IMMIGRATION REFORM FINDS ITS WAY THROUGH THE CONGRESS, TWO BILLS ARE A NECESSITY TO EVENTUALLY STOP THE INGRESS OF ANY MORE FLOWS OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS. 1. THE LEGAL WORKFORCE ACT CONTAINING MANDATORY E-VERIFY AND HALT ILLEGAL ALIENS TAKING JOBS AND HOLDING EMPLOYERS ACCOUNTABLE. 2. A SIMPLE AMENDMENT TO END THE BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP BILL TO STEM THE INFLOW OF SMUGGLED BABIES EITHER UNBORN OR AS AN INFANT, INTO THE UNITED STATES TO GAIN INTENTIONAL RIGHTS TO BE A CITIZEN AND A MASSIVE FINANCIAL BURDENING THE U.S. TAXPAYER. 3. THE REINTRODUCTION OF FORMER PRESIDENT BUSH 2006 SECURE FENCE ACT IN ITS ENTIRETY. THIS IS A DOUBLE PARALLEL FENCE STRETCHING ALONG THE BORDER OF THE U.S STATES AND ITS SOUTHERN NEIGHBOR. AMERICA MUST REDUCE SANCTUARY CITIES, CHAIN MIGRATION AND THE ILLEGAL ALIEN INVASION. 4. A GOVERNMENT ISSUED PICTURE ID CARD, WHICH CONTAINS INFORMATION TO USE IN PROVING WHO YOU ARE?
Thumbs up Dave. Your comments pretty well define the problem,
CA students get shafted by Prop 30 http://t.co/Kn0BLN7d SURPRISE LOL #tcot #catcot @TheTwisters @WashingtonDCTea #TPPatriots #Twinkies
YEP….I TOLD THEM SO TOO….These little whipper-snappers just don’t listen to us old farts. They just can’t seem to realize that we have been around this block before!!!!!
SAME goes for ALL those promises Obama made…..GOOD LUCK WITH THAT!!!! I can’t wait to say I TOLD YOU SO on those too. REMEMBER all the promises he made in o8?????
DUMMIES……..NOTHING MORE…..
Like they couldn’t see that coming:
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/top-stories/prop-30-funds-headed-for-wall-street-not-students/
For All my twitter friends that are in CA. And the rest of you can read our nations future. http://t.co/rgpEpKJP
Interesting read
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/top-stories/prop-30-funds-headed-for-wall-street-not-students/
Jerry Brown is cut from the same LYING deceitful Communist cloth as Obama……Honestly, what did you expect???? California natives unite and tell the “transplants” from other states and countries to stop ruining our state and take a hike!!
The UC system shouldn’t be this corrupt. http://t.co/xNI8gfVz
California. Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Stu… http://t.co/kavAMNd7
[CITATION NEEDED]
[...] the California Political Review [...]
[...] the California Political Review [...]
[...] the California Political Review [...]
How CA’s prop 30 won’t make it to college classrooms: http://t.co/B6lsBKre
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/top-stories/prop-30-funds-headed-for-wall-street-not-students/
this piece evinces an embarrassing degree of financial illiteracy.
Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Students Get the Shaft http://t.co/cMiIKfzl Hahahahaha….so typical.
I hope all who voted for this is happy. My “no” made no difference besides being able to point the finger at those who voted “yes”.
I hope all who voted for this is happy. My “no” made no difference besides being able to point the finger at those who voted “yes”. So sad that education money is taken away for unnecessary politics.
You have to be some kind of idiot to write this, Leighton Woodhouse. After reading the responses of your readership, however, I’m inclined to believe that you’re catering to the stupid intentionally. The fact that a small part (less than 1%) of the revenues generated by Prop 30 will go to repaying UC debt does not reduce the entire measure to “headed for wall street”.
When big institutions like the UC system need capital for expansion, construction, or renovation projects (which require a large lump sum investment), they tend to take out loans and then repay them on a long term basis. Those loans tend to be provided by large financial institutions (what you call Wall Street banks), because that’s exactly what they are designed to do. Few other organizations can foot such a large bill at once.
There’s no magic or crookery going on here. This is exactly how it’s supposed to work. The fact that the economy hit a recession and interest rates rose does not mean it’s time to don the tin foil hats and sound the conspiracy siren. It means that the UC system, like all other major organizations, took a beating from the economic downturn. The funds from Prop 30 will provide the relief that the system needs. Students will benefit from its prosperity, as will faculty, staff, and yes, the big bad administration.
This is nothing more than a poorly informed, poorly thought out opinion piece, and it should be visibly labelled as such. You are a sad excuse for a journalist, Leighton Woodhouse.
Except everyone posting here has Prop 30 wrong. It doesn’t fund UC’s just K-12 and Community Colleges 89% and 11% respectively which at last count is a full 100%. Read the “Swapping Our Future” report and then see if you still agree the rate swapping and interest rates in general are working as they are supposed to. The unholy connection between UC regents who are also from and/or are on the boards of major banks is a major conflict of interest.
[...] its debt in the period between May 2007 and the end of last year. So how did it happen? As the California Political Review notes: An increasing number of posts in top UC management and on the Board of Regents have been [...]
When will they learn? Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Stu… http://t.co/9MivjVk9
[...] the California Political Review [...]
trust me folks, both sides are in bed with “the man”
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/top-stories/prop-30-funds-headed-for-wall-street-not-students/
Long post you may need to arrow down to see it all
“Here we are…We have a vote of the people, I think the only state in the country that says let’s raise our taxes, for our kids, for our schools, and for our California dream.” California Governor Jerry Brown What could go wrong…….
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/top-stories/prop-30-funds-headed-for-wall-street-not-students/
Ever wonder while we vote to raise taxes to support our own childrens education while struggling to put food on the tables and a roof over our heads how much of our tax money goes to other country’s? I am not sure anyone exactly knows for sure but its more than $30 Billion dollars. Plus money for Pakistan and Afganistan that may be listed in the budget under “global war on terror”.
US Foreign operations funding 2011
USAid, Administration—————–$1,527,000,000
Bilateral Economic Assistance——–$21,209,000,000
Military/Security Assistance———-$8,117,000,000
Multilateral Assistance—————-$2,303,000,000
Total———————————$33,155,000,000
2011 Key international aid and humanitarian assistance accounts
(in US$ millions)
Global health and child survival—————–7,829
Development assistance————————-2,520
International disaster & famine assistance——863
Migration & refugee assistance——————-1,687
Emergency migration & refugee assistance——50
Millennium Challenge Corporation—————-898
Intrnl Narcotics control & law enforcement——1,594
Nonproliferation, anti-terrorism, demining——739
Foreign military financing———————–5,374
Peacekeeping operations————————-304
World Bank global environmental facility——90
International clean technology fund————185
Strategic climate fund—————————–50
World Bank intrnl development association—-1,233
Global food security fund————————100
Intrnl fund for agricultural development——30
International organisations & programs——354
(Both House and Senate have earmarked more than $7bn of their proposed budgets for a newly created contingency fund for the global war on terror and for operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. Details of where and how these funds will be used are still being negotiated.)
figures from the Congressional Research Service in a spreadsheet: http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/datablog/2011/nov/07/us-foreign-aid-budget-cuts#data
State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs FY2012 Budget and Appropriations http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/R41905.pdf
http://www.capoliticalreview.com/top-stories/prop-30-funds-headed-for-wall-street-not-students/
As A UC student I can say this money is helping us. If this didn’t pass my school would have increased our tuition and fired teachers to make up for the mistakes the reagents already made. Granted the money from prop 30 is essentially just going to be funneled to Wall St. I’m just happy it’s prop 30 money and not my tuition and my teachers paychecks. The broken part of this system is that the regents don’t have consequences for their mistakes. It should be their money going to wall street, not your taxes and my tuition.
[...] the California Political Review notes: An increasing number of posts in top UC management and on the Board of Regents have been [...]
Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Students Get Shafted — California Political Review – http://t.co/2DHTLZoC
[...] the California Political Review notes: An increasing number of posts in top UC management and on the Board of Regents have been [...]
[...] “Prop. 30 Taxes Diverted to Wall Street, Students Get Shafted,” California Political [...]
Leighton, I’m a conservative and voted against Prop 30 BUT!! I’m none too happy about you, Breitbart and various other bloggers making a connection with the Berkeley student’s research and Prop 30.
1. The “Sapping Our Future” publication does not reference Prop 30 even once
2. According to the actual law as written Prop 30 only funds primary schools K-12 and Community Colleges, no funding for UC Schools is listed.
3. This issue of rate swapping, 300% rate increases in tuition lower UC enrollment was scandalous enough to merit it’s own publicity without erroneously linking Prop 30 with the practice of rate swapping.
2.
[...] From CaPoliticalReview.com [...]
come now. why is this article about prop 30? prop 30 spared massive education cuts, which it will still do.
This article SHOULD be about the UC board of regents and about how they are spending their money. But it seems that this website is more about bashing Democrats and not actually interested in solving problems.
ps. 12 of the 16 appointed UC Regents were appointed by Arnold, and it seems that a good deal of this Wall Street business occurred during Arnold’s time in office.
This article is great, but somebody on facebook is arguing that it sounds more like a theory then fact. Can somebody clarify?
[...] Prop 30 takes the top marginal state income tax rate up to 13.3%, bumps the state sales tax up a quarter percent, as well as a bunch of other new taxes. Of course the proponents hid behind a school house, but the real drivers for the proponents were three things: One, Hispanic gibsmedat welfare, Two, the salary, benefits and retirement packages of public employees, and three, Wall Street. [...]