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Old burdens overwhelm smaller Detroit

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Detroit, which has seen its population slip to 700,000 from more than twice that in the 1950s, is as much as $20 billion in debt.
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A General Motors employee works on an assembly line at the automaker’s plant in Wentzville, Mo. GM’s bankruptcy strategy would not help in Detroit’s case, a bankruptcy law professor says.

DETROIT >> Four years ago America’s Big Three automakers mortgaged all they owned or went into bankruptcy court to keep from going broke.

Since then General Motors, Chrysler and Ford have all returned to full financial health, unlike Detroit itself, which filed for bankruptcy Thursday after years of painful decline.

So why can’t the Motor City use bankruptcy to transform itself in the same way? Unfortunately for Detroit, it’s not that simple. Automakers were able to shed most of their problems in bankruptcy court and come out leaner and more competitive. The city can get rid of its gargantuan debt, but a bankruptcy judge can’t bring back residents or raise its dwindling revenue.

“In General Motors at least you could have this dream about there being increased revenues in the future,” said Doug­las Baird, a bankruptcy law professor at the University of Chicago. “It’s much harder to do that in the case of a city like Detroit because it doesn’t sell a product.”

Detroit, which filed the largest municipal bankruptcy case in American history, owes as much as $20 billion to banks, bondholders and pension funds. It has revenue of about $1.1 billion per year, a number that drops by about $100 million annually. And it’s burdened with a running deficit of $327 million.

The city had to borrow $80 million from Bank of America last year just to keep the lights on.

City taxes are already at limits set by the state, so the only way Detroit can raise revenue is to attract more workers and residents so they pay taxes. But with high crime, poor services and decrepit neighborhoods, people are moving out rather than in. The population has fallen to around 700,000, less than half as many people as during the heyday of the 1950s.
 

Much of the city’s debt to banks and bondholders is secured by tax revenue, and just how much the creditors get will have to be hashed out in court. A big chunk is owed to employee pension plans and for the health care costs of more than 18,000 retirees. So the city is caught in a time warp of sorts. It has obligations left over from the boom days, with today’s much smaller revenue base.

“Even if they were completely successful in wiping out all of the debt, it doesn’t solve all of the problems,” said Steve Miller, board chairman at insurance giant AIG, who has turned around a number of struggling companies. “The retirement obligation and health care obligation of a workforce that used to support a 2 million population cannot be supported with the diminished population of 700,000.”

Detroit’s problem, he said, is similar to what he faced at Bethlehem Steel, which had 12,000 active workers contributing to pension plans that served 130,000 retirees.

“There was no way to make that math work,” Miller said. Retirees had to take reduced benefits after pensions were turned over to the federal government.

Like those at Bethlehem Steel, Detroit’s pensioners are also likely to see benefit cuts.

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder is sympathetic but says the city is in dire straits.

“A lot of people worked hard for the city for a lot of years,” he said. “They’re on a fixed income. We all need to appreciate that can be a difficult situation. This is a very difficult situation overall, though.”

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