Contributors
Jon Coupal- Columnist
Jon Coupal
is an attorney and president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers
Association -- California's largest taxpayer organization with
offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento. [go to website] [go
to Coupal index]
Beware
Compassionate Lawmakers
Social
engineering has destroyed state's economy...
[Jon Coupal] 12/31/03
Years ago,
during a particularly nasty downturn in the national economy,
aerospace
industry leader Boeing was laying off thousands
of employees. For Seattle, Washington, where Boeing was located,
the blow to the community was devastating. During that time,
someone erected a billboard in Seattle that read, "Will
the last person to leave Seattle please turn out the lights?"
While most employed Californians can chuckle over this gallows
humor, we are painfully aware that it can happen here. Indeed,
the threats to good, high paying jobs are especially numerous
in the Golden State.
Maintaining high numbers of good jobs in any economy is hard
enough. But the modern business environment mandates flexibility
and rapid reaction to changing markets on a daily basis. In a
race with onrushing technological developments that overnight
may make their jobs obsolete, even highly educated workers in
the high tech industry know that a pink slip is as close as the
latest technological advance by a competing company. Add to that
lower labor costs in other parts of the world and the concept
of employment stability becomes a quaint notion of a bygone era.
As an example, IBM has just announced that it will be shifting
thousands of programming jobs overseas.
There is
another reason why California workers feel particularly insecure.
The high
cost of living requires a good paying job
to afford even a modest home and car. Anything less means struggling
to pay rent and riding the bus. So it is ironic that it is those
in government, who justify almost any burden placed on business
by saying "it is for the workers," who are responsible
for destroying so many well-paying manufacturing jobs.
A study, to be released in January by the Rose Institute of
State and Local Government at Claremont McKenna College, shows
that state regulations have sharply cut the number of manufacturing
jobs, reducing the opportunity for many workers to enter the
middle class.
Steven Frates, the study's co-author, says California is losing
its manufacturing base not only overseas but also to other states.
California lost 288,000 manufacturing jobs over the last five
years and manufacturing positions have declined from 13.9 percent
of all state jobs to 10.0 percent. The state has lost nearly
$100 billion in manufacturing sales from July 1999 to October
2002.
Although some displaced workers find jobs in retail, these jobs
represent a tremendous cut in pay. Average manufacturing jobs
pay nearly $58,000 while the statewide average for all jobs is
$25,000. What makes the loss of these jobs even more tragic is
that it didn't have to happen. Our own state government's policies
are primarily responsible.
Among the policies with which the study finds fault are the
state's failure to genuinely reform the workers' compensation
system and its skyrocketing costs, the mandating of health benefits
for employees and the failure to give local governments tax incentives
to encourage the building of factories.
This last summer, I had the opportunity to see the results of
the state's anti-job policies first hand when I toured Coast
Converters, a Los Angeles area manufacturer of plastic bags.
The company can no longer remain in California and be competitive.
It is in the process of relocating to Nevada where it will save
nearly a million dollars annually on taxes and the cost of workers
compensation insurance. When Coast Converters goes, so will nearly
100 jobs.
Most of those in the Legislature who are responsible for these
job-killer policies remain clueless. Mandating benefits for workers
may have seemed like an act of compassion at the time, but the
unintended consequences are proving a personal tragedy for thousands
of workers, and a severe break on the economic expansion that
could provide the tax revenues to lift the state out of its financial
quagmire.
And make no mistake. While these jobs rarely create millionaires,
they provide pay and benefits that exceed those associated with
the typical retail job. Thus, one would think that our policy
makers would be falling all over themselves trying to retain
these well paying (and tax revenue producing) positions. But
this is the California Legislature, so political agendas will
trump common sense every time.
Liberal Legislators
in Sacramento who like nothing better than to engage in "social engineering" to tell the rest
of us how to live and run our businesses are the first to decry
the ever-growing gap in California between the working class
and the wealthy. Yet a primary cause of this divergence is staring
them back in the mirror every time they enact some burdensome
regulation or higher "fee" that drives the manufacturing
sector out of the state.
Unless we
see a reversal of course by Sacramento, don't be surprised
to see a billboard
that reads, "Will the last one leaving
California please pay the taxes."
copyright
2003 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers association
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