|
|
Contributor
Ray
Haynes
Mr.
Haynes is an Assembly member representing Riverside and
Temecula.
He serves on the Appropriations and Budget Committees. [go to
Assembly Member Haynes
website at California Assembly][go to Haynes index]
Rats,
Rents, Garbage and Jobs
The
legislature's Democrats don't get it...
[Ray
Haynes] 4/20/04
The Department
of Finance, in its April 2004 Finance Bulletin, observed that
California added 5,200 non-farm jobs, which “is
surprisingly low considering the nation as a whole gained 308,000
jobs.” Apple Computer just closed down its Sacramento plant,
and the California State Automobile Association just moved all
of its telephone operations to Arizona. Just these two announcements
this week cost the state 1000 of the 5200 jobs it added last
quarter. This is just a typical week in California. Add a few
jobs, lose a lot.
By the time
this missive hits your doorstep, California should have some
form
of worker’s compensation reform package,
which hopefully will relieve some of the pressure on California
businesses. This reform, however, is just the first step in California’s
long road to economic recovery. California has a lot more problems
that it needs to solve before businesses bring jobs back to our
fair state.
According
to one business owner (whose sentiments echo those of many
I hear), “Worker’s comp… [is] just
one of many items,” including energy, rents, labor and
taxes. He went on to note “even garbage costs are less
in Nevada.” Result? He is moving his business to Reno.
Even the
Los Angeles Times now agrees that “rising business
costs are restraining hiring and discouraging new employers from
setting up shop.”
Think about it, when even garbage costs less in Nevada, California
has a problem. Everybody generates garbage of some type, and
when we generate garbage, we have to pay to get rid of it. If
a California business has to pay more to get rid of it, that
business is automatically at a competitive disadvantage to a
business from another state.
When all
the other costs are combined--insurance, rent, electricity,
tax burdens,
unemployment insurance, and the daunting cost of
compliance with California's environmental mandates (like protecting
the flies and rats in my neighborhood), it is no wonder that
a rational business owner would find Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico,
or Texas a more attractive place to live and operate his business.
Los Angeles may be closer to the beach, but if a Los Angeles
business can’t compete with a Las Vegas business making
the same product, it goes broke regardless of whether it has
a nice view. Bankrupt business owners don’t provide too
many jobs, don’t perform any services, and if nothing else
causes alarm for the Democrats up here, this should: They don’t
pay taxes.
The amazing
thing is that my Democrat friends don’t get
it. Rich business owners pay lots of money in taxes, and they
provide jobs to others who, in turn, pay lots of money in taxes.
If a left-wing Democrat in the Capitol actually thought about
economics at all, he or she would figure out that having lots
of rich people providing lots of jobs would be the first step
toward creating bigger government and more money for government
programs.
But these
left-wingers just seem to lack common sense. Too many of them
share the
sentiments of one of their leadership
team, who when asked last year about businesses leaving the state,
said “You can’t blow off California. If a few companies
want to go and rip off some other state, that’s fine with
me!” So they raise taxes, create more regulations, increase
rent, energy and insurance costs, and then wonder why all the
businesses leave the state and why the state doesn’t have
enough tax revenue to pay for all of their pie-in-the-sky programs.
If the worker’s compensation reform works, and more reforms
to our business climate follow, business owners in California
might start creating jobs again in California. Those jobs will
come, if they come, in spite of, and not because of, the Democrats
in the Legislature. The state will then have more money and the
Democrats, as usual, will want to spend the money on some hare-brained
government program while I will want to cut your taxes. On balance,
however, that is a much better fight than we’re facing
this year in Sacramento as the Democrats continue driving this
state and your business into bankruptcy. CRO
§
|
|