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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]
Most
Politicians Don't Understand...
...where
the money comes from...
[Jon Coupal] 1/21/04
The California Primary election is less than two months away
and voters will face critical decisions about the future of the
Golden State. On the ballot will be both Governor Schwarzenegger's
fiscal recovery proposals as well as Proposition 56, which would
rip the heart and soul out of Proposition 13. The election is
also the first step in the winnowing process that will determine
state representatives for the 2005/2006 legislative session.
This particular election is elevated in importance because it
will be the first opportunity for voters to do what polls this
last fall showed they wanted to do: recall the Legislature, which
polled lower in voter confidence than did former Governor Gray
Davis.
As we begin to evaluate the candidates, we would do well to
discard the traditional partisan methods of selection. Whether
they are Republican or Democrat, liberal or conservative they
won't be a part of the solution to California's problems if they
can't answer a simple question: How is wealth created?
A majority
of our current lawmakers seem to believe that the origin of
wealth
is rich people. Their approach to governing
is a lot like Willie Sutton's approach to robbing banks. Sutton
said he robbed banks because "that's where the money is."
To these
politicians all taxes are justifiable and those that fall on
the "rich" are
not only the most lucrative, they are the most justifiable.
When pressed,
however, they often have trouble defining who the rich are.
First of
all, it never includes them or their immediate
audience. During debate over the car tax some politicians said
that the tripling the car tax was right for someone who could
afford an SUV, so that must mean that they define SUV owners,
among others, as "rich."
If pressed,
in a moment of candor, these same representatives might generalize
that
businesses are "rich" as are
all those who own property. This view of property owners may
help to explain why tax- and-spend lawmakers have an obsession
with destroying Proposition 13.
But these
answers do not address the question of how wealth is created.
Wealth
is created by productivity. Without productivity
an economy stagnates and dies. And without economic activity,
the tax base stagnates and dies. And although all this may be
lost on advocates of the "Nanny State," it is the tax
revenue from the proceeds of this productivity that allows their
pet programs to be financed.
Unfortunately, our current pack of representatives have disgraced
themselves through their inability to understand the relationship
between government income and spending, and worse yet, through
their denial that there should even be a connection.
People of
good will can disagree on spending priorities, but the refusal
to link
spending with the taxpayers' ability to provide
revenue is unconscionable. Tragically, this is exactly what happened
over the last five years and why California faces what is described
as an "institutional" spending problem.
Fortunately, Gov. Schwarzenegger gets it, as do a handful of
members of the Legislature. In his State of the State address
the governor again rejected tax increases and he called on Democrats
to join him in boosting the business climate. In taking this
position, he echoed the thoughts of 43 prominent economists,
including Milton Friedman, George Shultz and Art Laffer, who
last year signed a letter stating that tax increases would not
solve the state's problems, that the answer could only be found
through economic growth.
After the governor's remarks, even Gray Davis, interviewed on
KNX radio, said that a strong economy is the answer.
Still, a majority of legislators seem to be falling in line
behind Senate leader John Burton who has tied his willingness
to cut programs to balancing the budget through tax increases.
They continue to believe that, in a state that already ranks
near the top in taxes, they can increase taxes without further
damaging productivity.
This fight is a long way from over. The candidates that are
selected this March 2nd could well be making critical economic
decisions for all of us in the near future.
So if a candidate
asks for your support. Ask them if they understand how wealth
is created. If they give you a "deer in the headlights" look,
vote for someone else.
copyright
2004 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers association
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