On Memorial Day, the Senate by way of one of its committees restored
much of the spending from the budget originally forwarded by Gov. Bobby
Jindal to the House. This action signals to the House that it cannot pass
its version, and must acquiesce or continue to drag out a process that only
will discomfit those wedded to opposition. The panel did so in a manner
designed to give the House majority maximum cover – because the argument all
along has been symbolic, not substantive.
Had the argument been one of substance – what is the appropriate amount
of revenue to be raised by state government and the appropriate things on which
to spend it, with an equilibrium point established by the value of an
incremental function of government being performed equaling or exceeding the
injury done to the people by removing their property in order to pay for it – things
would have turned out very differently than what occurred in the House. Instead
of taking an artificial concept – “one-time money” – and making that the
baseline on which to establish a spending figure in addition to official
recurring revenue forecasts, followed by abdicating the responsibility to
specify and justify areas of low
priority to eliminate to the executive branch with only vague, if
not unrealistic, guidance on how to do so, the substantive approach would
have been to collect all recurring monies, match them in accordance to
functions by need by whatever legal means necessary, and then during debate explain
what things previously funded were not going to be and why.
But the so-called “fiscal conservatives” took the symbolic approach. They
embraced a problem created by the very process – a state fiscal structure that through
the overuse of dedications misallocates
revenues – then decided to embrace the artificiality of “one-time money” –
defining it as nonrecurring in nature when in fact a significant
portion of it recurs with regularity – as a cudgel to use to hack away at
spending to “prove” they are what they say they are – but then handed the
cudgel to the executive branch to do their dirty work for them, enabling them
to blame it and others in the future if the cuts they forced proved too
unpopular.
It’s a great political strategy if you’re unserious about having a
genuine debate over the appropriate amount of government taxing and spending,
where you goal is more to preen to voters than actually act as a fiscal
conservative. Real fiscal conservatives, by contrast, would implement a review
of all sources of revenue in government, including exceptions made and purposes
to which they are dedicated, decide whether the exceptions serve a necessary public
purpose and that the dedications are appropriate and/or are commensurate in
amount to the function needing funding, and then realign the system to generate
the appropriate amount raised in a manner where it can be directed proportionally
to actual needs in order of priority.
That’s a much more intellectually-demanding and politically-daunting
exercise than the approach taken by many in the House (nor possible given just
this one session and in one where eliminations or reductions of tax credit,
deductions, exemptions, and exclusions cannot be considered), but one that the Senate Finance Committee at
least started on. Taking the budget from the House, which had dropped all of
the one-time money (even if in
name only) it restored about all of that money and more that the House had
rendered vague instructions to the executive branch by which to cut, and then
went to the trouble of engaging in the exercise of matching the genuine
nonrecurring revenues tucked away in the operating budget to one-time
expenditures in it.
If this product passes out of the Senate relatively unchanged, likely a
House majority will go along with it. Those fiscal chicken hawks who especially
want to wring political points out of the situation will rail and vote against
it but enough others will declare victory, arguing they forced the Senate and
governor into greater fiscal propriety when in fact nothing of the sort will
have occurred, much less by their own efforts, because all along that never was
the debate they had.
3 comments:
Contrary to you, I strongly believe spending one-time, non-recurring revenues for recurring operating expenses is a huge, real problem.
Apparently, that is what the Governor believed five years ago. At least, that is what he said.
No longer. Was he right then, or now?
Jeffrey Sadow calling House conservative "chicken hawks" is quite ironic, considering Sadow's hero, Bobby Jindal, is the most chicken shit Governor we've had in a long time.
Say what you will about Kathleen Blanco. Yes, a bad Governor, but at least he didn't hide under her desk every time someone in the media wanted to ask her a question.
REPEAT: Was he right then, or now?
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