CALIFORNIAâS governor, Jerry Brown, has never bothered to disguise his irritation with those who mock the Golden State as Americaâs answer to Greece. So it was with some relish that he strutted before journalists, on January 11th, to announce that California had eliminated its budget deficit. The general fund (which accounts for about two-thirds of state spending, bar federal transfers) would, he predicted, end the 2013-14 fiscal year $851m in the black. Surpluses of varying size were projected for the next three years.
Even better, the provisional budget he unveiled did not, for the first time in years, take an axe to public services. Instead Mr Brown was able to increase spending on schools and universities by around 5%, and to avoid cuts in most other areas. Money was found to help the state meet its new obligations under Barack Obamaâs health-care law. Listening to the governor giving the news was like âwaking up from a nightmareâ, said a San Diego college official.