User Profile
Search
Blog Viewer
AV Town Crier Sez:
Thursday, March 15 2012 - 12:44 AM
Why CA is going broke
California’s Greek Tragedy
No one should write off the Golden State. But it will take massive reforms to reverse its economic decline.
By MICHAEL J. BOSKIN and JOHN F. COGAN
Long a harbinger of national trends and an incubator of innovation, cash-strapped California eagerly awaits a temporary revenue surge from Facebook IPO stock options and capital gains. Meanwhile, Stockton may soon become the state’s largest city to go bust. Call it the agony and ecstasy of contemporary California.
California’s rising standards of living and outstanding public schools and universities once attracted millions seeking upward economic mobility. But then something went radically wrong as California legislatures and governors built a welfare state on high tax rates, liberal entitlement benefits, and excessive regulation. The results, though predictable, are nonetheless striking. From the mid-1980s to 2005, California’s population grew by 10 million, while Medicaid recipients soared by seven million; tax filers paying income taxes rose by just 150,000; and the prison population swelled by 115,000.
California’s economy, which used to outperform the rest of the country, now substantially underperforms. The unemployment rate, at 10.9%, is higher than every other state except Nevada and Rhode Island. With 12% of America’s population, California has one third of the nation’s welfare recipients.
Partly due to generous union wages and benefits, inflexible work rules and lobbying for more spending, many state programs and institutions spend too much and achieve too little. For example, annual spending on each California prison inmate is equal to an entire middle-income family’s after-tax income. Many of California’s K-12 public schools rank poorly on standardized tests. The unfunded pension and retiree health-care liabilities of workers in the state-run Calpers system, which includes teachers and university personnel, totals around $250 billion.
Meanwhile, the state lurches from fiscal tragedy to fiscal farce, running deficits in good times as well as bad. The general fund’s spending exceeded its tax revenues in nine of the last 10 years (the only exceptions being 2005 at the height of the housing bubble), abetted by creative accounting and temporary IOUs.
Now, the bill is coming due. After running a $5 billion deficit last year and another likely deficit this year, Gov. Jerry Brown’s budget increases spending next year by $7 billion and finances the higher spending with income and sales-tax hikes. Specifically, he’s proposing a November ballot initiative raising the state’s top income tax rate to 12.3%, making it the nation’s highest, and raising the basic state sales tax rate, already the nation’s highest, to 7.75% from 7.25%.
While Mr. Brown deserves credit for some earlier spending cuts to reduce a large inherited budget shortfall, the budget fails to address long-run structural problems, counting on a cyclical economic recovery and stock bubble for a bailout until the next self-inflicted crisis. Moreover, he’s thus far failed to embrace a bold reform agenda to save money, improve services, and restore confidence among the state’s beleaguered taxpayers and bond holders.
The ballot initiative’s $31 billion, multiyear “temporary” tax increase is larger than the “temporary” hike it replaces and its income-tax hike is retroactive to Jan. 1, 2012. Worse, it doubles down on excessive reliance on high-income taxpayers, especially their stock options and capital gains, which are taxed as ordinary income. During economic good times, it’s not unusual for the state to collect one-half of all income-tax revenue from the top 1%. This extreme progressivity leads to boom-bust cycles of rapidly rising revenue followed by complete collapse. Not surprisingly, the revenue is all spent on the upswing, forcing disruptive “emergency” cutbacks on the way down.
The state’s progressive tax-and-spend experiment is broken, threatening basic services, from courts and parks to education and health care for its most vulnerable citizens. Mr. Brown’s tax initiative only exposes the state to an ever more dangerous roller-coaster ride.
No wonder many Silicon Valley CEOs say they won’t expand in California because of high taxes and burdensome regulation. And no wonder net migration has recently reversed, with hundreds of thousands of workers and their families leaving the state in search of better opportunities.
California still ranks first in technology, agriculture and entertainment among the 50 states. But it is near the bottom in business and tax climate and state bond ratings. It’s a complex picture, but at its core is the high-tax welfare state run amok.
Many Americans fear the federal fiscal train wreck will turn us into Greece. But, barring major change, they need look no further than California to see what this future portends. Relying on ever-higher taxes to fund payments to an outsized population of benefit recipients is a recipe for exporting prosperity. That is one California trend that other states emulate at their peril.
No one should write off California. It still has great strengths. And it can turn some of its short-term challenges, such as the pressures from ethnic and linguistic diversity (the state is now 37% Hispanic and 13% Asian), into long-term strengths in the global economy. But the political class must face up to the reality that services will have to be far more carefully targeted; the tax system overhauled with lower rates on a broader base of economic activity and people (almost half of all Californians pay no state income tax); and inefficient state programs reformed to spend less and produce far better outcomes.
Mr. Brown is a man of ideas, having run for president in 1992 on a bold flat-tax agenda. Instead of still more antigrowth tax hikes, he should break the grip on the state legislature of his party’s special interests—public employee unions, trial lawyers, teacher unions and extreme environmentalists.
A California renaissance—building on the best reforms in budgeting and taxes, education and welfare, crime prevention and pensions by such leaders as Rudy Giuliani, Jeb Bush, Chris Christie and Andrew Cuomo—is still possible. What it requires is a governor with the vision, determination and political will to see it through.
Messrs. Boskin and Cogan are, respectively, professors of economics and public policy at Stanford University, where they are both senior fellows at the Hoover Institution.
marino says...
So state income tax will be the highest in the nation at 12.3%, double that of most states and 1.3% ahead of 2nd place Hawaii at 11%.
I believe we also are numero uno state gas tax in the nation. No wonder thousands have left. Does one have to leave before admitting to living in a political shithole of a state? Havn’t even brought up business taxes and those businesses that have left.
The guys running the state would fuck the weather up if they could. Give them time.
Look on the bright side. When you’ve hit bottom, there’s only one way to go. Sideways?
(
send private message
)
Cagy Wolf says...
Ahh Roxi at one time California had the 5th largest income in the world, so what happened? Illegal immigration happened my friends, illegal immigrants are collecting 22.6 billion dollars in social services benefits and some are working under the table are also collecting these benefits.
I thought the big justification for illegal immigrants is that they do jobs americans won’t do, so why so many collecting welfare?
( send private message )
marino says...
Yeah. Illegal immigration definately doesn’t help. But who cares.
( send private message )
Cagy Wolf says...
Certainly not Matt all he is concerned about is how much SSI that I am collecting. Of course like most hetrophobic liberal left loonies he doesn’t consider how much illegal (and legal) immigrants collects SSI or SDI. Of course I have no objections to those that have paid into social security, but these others who have come not to be a contribution but a burden on our nation.
I saw first hand how these parasites come to america, collect a nice sum, get prefered employment making wages many americans would give their left arm for.
( send private message )
Cagy Wolf says...
I mentioned Victor a Discovery Center illegal immigrant who collects SDI (social security) for his "mental illness), he was just a criminal working the system for all its worth. His mental illness was he had anger issues, I don’t consider that a mental illness. Desert Haven got him a job at Edward;s Airforce base making $22.00 an hour and this scumbag attacked his employer. He promptly fled to Utah where he also attacked another employer, who knows where he is now. But the one thing you can be sure of he isn’t missing one SDI check.
At the Discovery Center I watched a group bring in a van full of illegal immigrants who applied for membership at the Discovery Center.
At the same time an american citizen Kim needed medication and it was I and a friend who got her the medical treatment she needed including drug treatment. She attended a rehab that my buddy got her into and now she is doing fairly well.
Its where americans suffer that I draw the line at, when illegal and legal immigrants are able to collect or get benefits americans either don’t get or find it hard to obtain. I saw how it took 2 months for these two illegal aliens get SSI who never paid into the social security system, while a citizen waited two years to collect SDI (SSI).
( send private message )
Cagy Wolf says...
Marino it doesn’t help one bit and MSMedia won’t discuss the issue of these parasites.
Those Hollywood hypocrites like Chris Rock can call the Tea party insane and racist but acts the fool when questioned by it. It seems there is selective moral outrage by the liberal left loonies but silent when a liberal sprouts his hate speech.
( send private message )
AV Town Crier says...
The state went down the dumper 40 years when Moonbeam first became Governor and had a democrap/liberal state legislature on his side. We’ve never recovered from that fiasco.
( send private message )
Cagy Wolf says...
AVTC how true Moonbeam headed the state into debt and social programs that should only have went to citizens. The fact that under democratic state governments illegal immigration was overlooked in favor of big business. Reagan expanded that to help his big business buddies with all that cheap labor. Hey jobs were plentiful at one time for americans and immigrants, there were plenty to go around as long as you were willing to work.
But then big business and small learned how to increase their profit by hiring only immigrants whether legal or illegal.
1980 at Pure Aire Company they had around 93 illegal aliens working, americans 11. That 11 dropped down to 9 cause these fine immigrants would verbal or physically assault them. I and my two brothers worked there, my middle brother left. Tony and I stayed, where we were attacked several times. One homosexual exposed himself to Tony and Tony rammed his head into the side of a Pinto. Bashed it in he did. And I was subject to a couple of attacks, they learned quickly that I was no one to play with. After that I got “surprise” attacked and that didn’t go well with Beto (punched his lights out twice) and no one tried again. But he got me good I spilled my Dr. Pepper and Burger,he did the stupid. he walked and sat down with the wall with a picnic table in front, so I kicked the table so hard I saw his ribs compress.
He was mad, real mad. Just the way I like him, he come in running and I gave him one right in the side of the jaw. He dropped like he had been hit with a sledge hammer.
Bye bye lights out.
Never bothered me again did Beto.
Its funny I remember the scumbags names well.
They also left Wayne alone after he came in grabbed a 2 by 4, cut it to his liking and then proceed to beat the crap out of a fellow worker who had taken the day off and screwed Wayne’s wife.
Wayne put him into the hospital for a week. The company didn’t say a damn thing, they ignored all the crap the illegals pulled every day. Drinking and drugs in the parking lot at breaks and lunch hours.
They would come in ready looking for a fight, and I am happy to say back then most americans would give them one. Todd was another one they left alone, he was 6’4" and about 240 solid muscle. he was also immune to paid, one time he nailed his foot to a crate we were building. He didn’t even know he had done it until he tried to walk away. Funny, I laughed so hard.
Back to the issue, by 1980 california because of the pay, weather, relatives, welfare, illegal aliens from mexico flooded into california.
( send private message )
AV Town Crier says...
CW
I agree. Back in the ’80’s when I worked for the LA Unified School Dist. we couldn’t find anybody to apply for entry level jobs like custodian, gardener, maintenance worker (laborer). We couldn’t hire illegals (it’s against state law).
Nowadays you probably have people with master’s and doctorate degrees applying for those same jobs. What a strange world we live in.
I feel sorry for the states and cities that have large populations of illegals. They put a strain on public resources (ER, Welfare, etc) That’s not right.
What’s criminal is that the federal government won’t deal with it because it’s not PC. I do feel that our immigration laws need to be updated, no question about it. But, on the same token, the law is the law and it should be enforced.
I suspect there is a sneaky and sinister reason why the feds don’t enforce immigration laws. They got something up their sleeves.
(
send private message
)
Cagy Wolf says...
AVTC sure its called votes and cheap labor, thats why Obama threw a bone to the pro-illegal immigration groups hoping to keep the hispanic votes to the democrazy. Its sucide for a nation to allow such legal and illegal immigration, we have 138,000 legal immigrants every month. They will need jobs or they will end up on welfare also, but the thing that maddens me is the ones that come here not to work but to collect welfare, social security and have no intention of working unless its under the table. I mentioned several times how I lived next door to a clown house 23 illegal aliens living inside a four bedroom and four sleeping outside. Only one of them worked, drug dealing went on openly, drunken men fighting all day and night. Gang fights over the drug dealing, break ins and crime in the area rose. And getting the LASD out there was next to impossible and when they did show 36-48 hours or more later nothing was done.
I was showned several clown houses that a AVIMM (Antelope Avalley Independent Minute Men) showed me. There are several and I’d say reaching close to or over a 100 in the AV area.
So where are all the anti-illegal immigration groups today? Most just gave up or decided it was too dangerous to exercise their first amendment rights. Cause the last thing the pro-illegal immigration groups want is americans protesting them being in america.
( send private message )
Cagy Wolf says...
Go to any hospital in the AV and all you’ll see is illegal immigrants wanting free medical care, the average waiting time when I was last at AV Hospital in the ER was 24hours so they could treat the running noses of illegal aliens.
Go to the Lancaster welfare office and see how filled it is with illegal aliens. Grace Resources has two days et aside to give food and other help to illegal aliens and they don’t have to show ID like americans have to.
They have all the adavantages and then some as a citizen but none of the disadvantages.
They have sanctuary cities and get a pass where americans don’t get.
The nonsense needs to end before califoria and america can recover.
( send private message )
Cagy Wolf says...
Sure Matt, when any time someone suggests a national ID card, the liberal left screams its racism.
( send private message )
Cagy Wolf says...
National ID card and E-verify, INS to check all employers whether their employees are legally entitled to work. Raids at Home Depots cause quite a few hang out there to get day labor jobs where they can work under the table and collect welfare etc.
( send private message )
AV Town Crier says...
Sadly CW, every word you said is true. The waiting room at AVH is a snake pit. If I had to go there, I’d instruct the ambulance driver to just take me home to die.
( send private message )
Would you like to comment on this blog post? Login to talk back!
roxi says...
“But the political class”
I would say that it is the Clown-car ‘Political Class" in Sacramento who’s contributed greatly to CA’s problems, with their excuse of a 2/3 rd’s majority to get anything passed, which enables them to sit on their ass and do nothing.
Big Whig politico$, city and state CEO’s/Cops/Firefighters – only (not the janitors and teachers) who scammed the system by inflating their retirements at the last minute also are to blame.
Crooked rogue cops who connect themselves with gangs within gangs with tatts for dead people create massive lawsuits, that WE the taxpayer end up paying for. Money that should be going to the schools and infrastructure are instead being paid out for their bad behavior because nobody at the top (Cop Land) gives a shit.
Gee, we could go on and on, couldn’t we?
Crooked Mayors, Council men et al? The list is endless.
Previous governors, like Swartzi spent $$ like $hrub – maxing out the credit cards on trips to China — yet our export trade collapsed. What happened?!
California was the 8th LARGEST Economy in the world, before the Clown took over and gave everyone a pass on higher CAR registrations (oh baby!).
Re-access Prop 13, that’s a start, which I believe Brown is about to announce tomorrow. It’s part of his compromise w/ the 1,000’s of signatures he received from the unwashed demanding A MILLIONAIRE TAX in Ca.
No, we’re not Greece – TX hasn’t become GERMANY……yet.
( send private message )