A Spending Problem - not a Revenue Problem

By Gary Aminoff | 03/07/08 | 01:06 PM EDT | 0 Comments

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The Reason Foundation always seems to hit the nail right on the head.  A current article on their web site titled, "California Won't Fix Budget Until It Cuts Spending" is one of those.  I recommend that you go now and read the article.

Some excerpts:

It should come as no surprise that the politicians in Sacramento are resorting to the usual tricks to try to  paper over the growing budget gap another year without doing anything to solve the underlying problem: runaway spending. Government spending has significantly outpaced inflation plus population growth for years, and has even exceeded the profligate spending of recalled Gov. Gray Davis under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's tenure.

The Legislative Analyst's Office (LAO) recently issued a report pegging the deficit through June 2009 at $16 billion, up from the $14.5 billion estimate contained in the governor's budget proposal issued in January.

To address the problem, the Legislature passed > some "emergency" budget measures recently, but those measures are only expected to save about $2 billion. The bulk of the package consisted of > more borrowing, transfers, postponements, and other accounting gimmicks that will only delay the tough decisions lawmakers appear unwilling to make.

Part of the problem is the way the state budget is crafted. California utilizes incremental, or "line-item," budgeting, in which budget allocations are made based on adjustments to the previous year's spending levels, often with little justification. This provides little incentive to identify and eliminate lower-priority, inefficient, duplicative, or poorly-performing programs. By contrast, the State of Washington uses a "Priorities of Government" (POG) system, under which the government performs a top-to-bottom evaluation of what services the government provides and how. Government activities are ranked from most to least important and are funded on down the list until available revenues run out. One of the greatest benefits of the POG system is that it makes priority and trade-off decisions clear to everyone.

 Then there are the things government shouldn't be doing in the first place. Is it really a core government function to market agricultural products or license cabinetmakers, locksmiths, tree trimmers, and upholsterers?

Cutting such unnecessary programs is hardly the only solution to the problem, however.

The conclusion of the article is:

Legislators intent on trying to solve their spending problem on the backs of taxpayers through tax increases would be wise to take this lesson to heart, especially considering the ongoing housing crisis and threat of economic recession.

Five years ago, we had a massive budget deficit and a Democratic governor accused of negotiating sweetheart deals with the prison guards' union, and who pushed through a "play-or-pay" health-care mandate on California employers (which was thankfully repealed by voters in 2004).

Today, we have a massive budget deficit and a Republican governor who is offering the prison guards' union a $260 million a year raise that the LAO says is unnecessary and unaffordable anyway in the present fiscal climate, and who has tried to ram through a $14 billion health care plan and mandate (which has thankfully been shelved-for now).

Hooray for the two-party system.

It is time for Californians and their elected > representatives to undertake a serious re-evaluation of the proper role of government. Government has simply gotten too big and too intrusive.  The casualty is individual liberty. Only when we rediscover the truth of the maxim - "That government is best which governs least" - will we be able to restore any fiscal sanity to our state government [emphasis added].


TAGS: Budget, California, Deficit, Legislature, Schwarzenegger

 

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