Khross wrote:
Arathain:
When your employer banks their bankroll most likely, because I'm assuming they're a pretty stable business, is a simple data point that highlights the problem with government accounting and fiscal practices at all levels. 2012 Revenues should be used to pay 2013 payroll and probably are. Most of the private sector banks the following years payroll before they start counting profits and stashing improvement monies and re-investment funds. In government, that doesn't actually happen. Zero-sum accounting means you have to liquidate all of your appropriations and capital by the end of that fiscal year, because governments are appropriations controlled. Government finance gets complicated and makes no sense to the average Joe, because government finance is not anything like the finance most people encounter. Even giant multi-nationals carry balances across fiscal years, hold free capital to hedge against emergencies, and have liquid assets they can mobilize to deal with the unexpected. Our governments, at least in the United States, do not. Government agencies particularly do not. In fact, the reason payroll is always leveraged against a fiscal difficulty with our government agencies: it's the easiest line item to cut, because it involves the fewest creditors or vendors.
As for how disaster relief monies work, those grants are underwritten by bonds which are consigned to the appropriate government entity or agency after the funds are generated. The federal government typically borrows the grant money to for liquidity purposes, but doesn't actually have the money stashed or saved anywhere. Most of it doesn't come out of revenues or from actual revenue generating streams. Our government finances aren't set up properly for such things to happen.
Ok, great. However, this doesn't impact what I've said at all. If you'd like to restructure HOW they pay for emergencies, have at it. But the simple reality is that they must. Another reality is that despite the best planning, there will be emergencies that exceed the emergency budget, and drop the government into the red (at least for that line item). If no emergency ever exceeds the budget, they're probably budgeting too much for emergencies.