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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper discussing the results of an online simulation of various budget choices for California. Next10.org provides an array of choices to allow the user to take the projected $27.6 billion deficit projected by 2013 to a surplus of $2.2 billion in the same year. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CJ6_KSpubAdmCAbud.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
guests in financial crises, TVs Dr. Phil can be counted on to say, "Its math, not magic." Common sense and every familys budget reveals that spending more than comes
in is not sustainable over time; it seems that only governments - municipal, state and federal - cannot grasp that concept. Individuals and families live with that reality daily.
Why government cannot internalize the concept remains a mystery. In May 2009, California voters turned out at the polls at the rate
of 19 percent of all registered voters. Of several propositions the government was asking for, voters soundly rejected all but one. That one was to freeze the salaries
of all upper-level state government workers... Next 10 gives individuals a chance at fixing Californias worsening budget woes. The purpose here is
to fix all of Californias problems by recommending budget changes. The leading point of guidance is, "Its math, not magic." No individual, organization or government can consistently and
regularly spend more than they have in income. Whittling Next 10 states that California will have a $27.6 billion budget deficit in five
years in the absence of current action. Voters rejected higher tax rates and totally new taxes in 2009; all that currently remains is to cut expenses. K-12 Education Spending
California has been struggling with education outcomes. Of the 50 highest-spending school districts in the US, eight are in California (Lips, Watkins
and Fleming, 2008). Only three of these have even marginally-acceptable graduation rates, however. Two of these districts are San Jose (77.0 percent) and San Francisco (73.1 percent); the
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