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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]
Lurching
From One Budget Crisis to the Next
Reign in the spenders...
[Jon Coupal] 8/27/04
Whether we like it or not, it is already time to start thinking
of next year's state budget and its impact on taxpayers. Fiscal
policy in California is now a year-round sport.
This summer saw approval of a new budget without
a tax increase, just as the governor promised. However, the
budget that passed
spends several billion dollars more than the governor requested
because lawmakers have proven unable to curb spending. The budget
was "balanced" with one-time fixes such as cutting
deals with a handful of Indian gaming tribes, borrowing, and
taking more money from local government (with a promise it won't
happen for more than two years).
In fact, the budget is not balanced at all and
the "structural
deficit" still exists. The only good news is that Schwarzenegger
made some real progress in closing the gap. How quickly we achieve
a truly balanced budget depends on many factors, not the least
of which is the additional revenue that a revived economy provides.
But even under the best assumptions, an honest budget where expenditures
do not exceed revenues is still two years away.
Two years? The average citizen wants to know, what is so darned
difficult about spending no more money than we have? The answer
lies in the culture of California politics and, indeed, human
nature itself.
The current attitude of most government officials towards the
state's taxpayers can be best summed up in the more than two-century-old
words of Thomas Paine:
"We still find the greedy hand of government
thrusting itself into every corner and crevice of industry,
and grasping
at the spoil of the multitude. Invention is continually exercised
to furnish new pretenses for revenue and taxation. It watches
prosperity as its prey and permits none to escape without a tribute."
Let's be blunt. California is already a high tax state. The
result is that we are already suffering an exodus of businesses,
jobs and taxpayers. For California to be competitive we need
to reduce taxes, not increase them. But as long as members of
the Legislature have a free hand to spend at will, the state
budget will lurch from one crisis to the next, making it difficult,
if not impossible, to lower taxes.
We need to impose a spending limit with teeth. Although voters
approved Proposition 58 in the March election, this did not limit
spending. It only required that the budget be balanced, and reduced
the reliance on borrowing. This was a partial solution, but not
nearly good enough.
First, we need to roll back spending to a reasonable
benchmark. From that point, spending increases should be restricted
by a
clear, concise formula, one that limits spending increases to
increases in inflation and population growth. The formula should
provide a maximum that can be spent. Moreover, tax revenue collected
in excess of the limit should be placed in a reserve account
that can only be tapped in case of emergency or if tax revenues
fail to keep up with inflation and population. The "budget
stabilization" is a critical component of what is needed,
especially here in California where spending discipline is nonexistent.
California had a spending limit at one time, the work of Proposition
13 co-author Paul Gann, but it was taken from the people by stealth.
Proposition 111, a gas tax increase placed by the Legislature
on the 1990 ballot, contained buried language that re-configured
the spending limit formula in such a way as to make it meaningless.
In the final analysis, a real spending limit
prevents deficits. That is why Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association
has joined with
Assemblyman John Campbell and the California Taxpayers Association
to pursue an initiative, the Deficit Prevention Act. This measure,
unlike the former Gann Spending Limit, limits all state spending,
not just general fund spending. More and more, government spending
is from "fee" revenue and "special funds."
The ultimate goal is not to prevent all government growth, but
to let government grow at a rate more reflective of the rest
of society. If we don't, we can expect the spending gluttony
of elected officials to continue, and we will continue to be
accosted every year with threats of higher taxes. CRO
copyright
2004 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers association
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