Quickly mentioning a few other past policy initiatives enacted
connected to economic development, Jindal spent almost all his speech
discussing the desirability of the elimination of income taxes as a means for
continued success in this area. He then declared that he was pulling
his tax swap plan, basically no income taxes in exchange for higher and
expanded state sales taxes and some exceptions elimination, in favor of
anything that would eliminate income taxes. The plan had come under fire from a
number of quarters as its complexity served more to stoke fears than support.
Several bills already introduced would work to eliminate income
taxation, although none immediately, while other look to get rid of exemptions,
and one even wishes to institute a statewide
property tax dedicated to higher education funding. Cleverly, Jindal now
has removed his chin from leading this effort and has set himself up as arbiter
with more input than anybody else in whatever product manifests. And in
accepting this task, the Legislature leaves fewer resources available to pursue
more mischievous ends according to Jindal, such as challenges
to his budgeting.
While his specific package went down as a tactical defeat, this new strategy
promises to win the war. Three months ago, the policy conversation included
nothing about income tax elimination, which in his first successful run for
office Jindal said he would try to accomplish. But as he and surrogates stumped
for his plan, it became clear that those efforts have created an environment
where the question has become not if, but when and how income tax disappearance
will occur.
It’s also clear he will assume this role by his aggressive defense of
the basic idea of its abolishment, and in particularly striking language he
used in regards to the exemptions. If there’s been one area in which he has
deviated the most away from principled conservatism and more towards crony
capitalism, it has been in his support of special programs that enriched
certain industry interests or in funds that took on forms of bribes to get businesses
to relocate in the state. But when he lamented that “business” got more exempted
than paid in last year and lambasted the fact of 468 exemptions and asserted
that some of them were there to benefit “special interests” – a phrase seldom
heard from him since the very earliest days of his administration with ethics
reforms – this kind of populist language not often coming from him signaled he
now seems willing to roll back these kinds of programs (with one industry,
petroleum, already indicating willingness to have half of its breaks end in
exchange for the income tax erasure).
Whether the grand goal of no more income taxation can be achieved remains
in doubt. There’s a lot of revenue there – the latest Revenue Estimating
Conference pegs the amount to be derived at $3
billion or 37 percent of all general fund revenues – that exemptions of a
statutory nature cannot possibly cover, those totaling (including the half
already agreed to by the petroleum industry) about $1
billion, and eliminating lucrative and wasteful tax credits like the film
or solar
kind won’t come near to making up the rest. A flat
tax of 2 percent on income with other changes may be the best he can hope
for.
But if this is what gets presented to him in final bill form, he
certainly would not veto it to hold out for no income tax. Instead, he can
claim he wanted to go farther but would sign it as a good start. Victory could
be declared yet the “impatience” he spoke of as part of him that has he says
has fueled his quest for reform (even if that trait didn’t seem very evident to
observers throughout most of his first term, where he acted cautiously) could
continue to finish the job. While it’s more of a legacy (and perhaps a high
profile campaign talking point) to speak of being the guy who got rid of the
income tax, being the dude that made it flat and low isn’t so bad.
Jindal’s particular vision of a tax swap featuring the end of income
taxation that doesn’t increase individual burdens will not come to pass. Yet
his quest to transform the state’s fiscal structure into something like it
looks more certain now to succeed and underscores that this all along has been
his most cherished objective.
2 comments:
I'd just like to take the opportunity of today's episode of "Bobby Jindal is a Grandmaster Tenth-Dimensional Chess Player Who Knows Better Than the Unsophisticated Rubes Inhabiting This State Therefore His Latest Defeat is Actually a Brilliant Win" to observe that Jeff Sadow cannot write.
In this article we have yet another procession of winding, overwritten, nearly incoherent passages with unbelievable language such as "Cleverly, Jindal now has removed his chin from leading this effort and has set himself up as arbiter with more input than anybody else in whatever product manifests"; "Victory could be declared yet the 'impatience' he spoke of as part of him that has he says has fueled his quest for reform (even if that trait didn’t seem very evident to observers throughout most of his first term, where he acted cautiously) could continue to finish the job", and the epic run-on masterpiece "But when he lamented that 'business' got more exempted than paid in last year and lambasted the fact of 468 exemptions and asserted that some of them were there to benefit 'special interests' – a phrase seldom heard from him since the very earliest days of his administration with ethics reforms – this kind of populist language not often coming from him signaled he now seems willing to roll back these kinds of programs (with one industry, petroleum, already indicating willingness to have half of its breaks end in exchange for the income tax erasure)."
Professor, this is gibberish.
Mr. Sadow is like the loquacious drunk teetering against the bar who thinks he's making a brilliant argument with circuitous ramblings fueled by ten-dollar words where two-dollar ones would have sufficed, ramblings which in written form cause the average reader to have to go back and re-read entire paragraphs in order to make some sense of what the author was trying to say.
This high-sounding but badly-written stream-of-consciousness babble might be cute if Sadow were not a university professor, a Jindal administration lickspittle, or a condescending scold about the necessity of "transforming" the culture of Louisiana to a point just short of impacting his own state-funded job.
Clearly, the State of Louisiana has much bigger problems than the income tax.
The writing is an abomination, especially from a college professor.
"Being the dude ...", huh?
The Kool-Aid, and nothing but the Kool-Aid, so help me ...
I'd say more like Humpty-Dumpty, than the "dude."
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