Much like when the Khmer Rouge took
power in Cambodia over four decades ago, the Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards
Administration seems set upon rewriting history to declare the day it took
office as beginning the Year Zero, if the first transition team report
released
serves as any indicator.
The Economic
Development Committee's conclusions were followed by the predictable Transportation
version, which inevitably and sensibly argued for looking for more efficient use of
infrastructure dollars, directing all of them to roads needs, before implementing increased
taxation. Naturally, to follow this means putting a greater strain on the
operating budget, since some of the money that could go to roads ends up spent
on the state police and other matters, but beggaring other parts of state
government did not concern this group’s focus only on transportation priorities.
Other than for transportation
needs, the economic development recommendations actually may turn out the least
controversial of the several documents that will come out over the course of
the month. It lauds the state’s Department of Economic Development, citing
statistics to position it as a national leader – all without mentioning it made
the progress to gain this status through the two terms of former Republican Gov.
Bobby
Jindal.
Of course, given that Edwards in
his years in state government invented plenty of reasons, on rare occasion
actually accurately, to criticize Jindal, when credit accrues to his immediate
predecessor it seems that gets ignored as if he never existed. Indeed, the
conclusions also do not refer to Jindal policies that assisted economic growth,
such as tax cuts and ethics reform, even as it admits that the state recently experienced
“private-sector job growth … among the best in the South and in America” and more
in-migration than out-migration, but could not bear to give credit where it was due, instead arguing that superior
bureaucracy brought it all about.
So naturally it concentrates on the
use of government as a director and manager of economic growth as a strategy
going forward. Some of it comes off as little more than boilerplate along the
lines of economic growth occurs with higher quality of life and particularly better
education, while other portions delve into more technocratic adjustments. Most
suggestions won’t harm economic development and might even help it.
But it does throw in one trendy stinker
on the topic of “inclusion,” alleging that too many firms led or owned by white
males get too much state money in contracts. Cutting to the chase, “LED … and
all other state agencies should adopt policies that incentivize and reward
small, local, minority and women-owned business inclusion metrics,” whatever
the last couple of words mean.
The idea that “disadvantaged
business enterprises” – defined as those owned by non-white, non-males not
disabled – get a little extra attention in and of itself can work without costing
taxpayers more than necessary. In contract bidding, such businesses often find
themselves less informed about potential jobs and less experienced in putting together
credible bids for these.
However, the state only should make
extra efforts to publicize available contract opportunities; for example,
creating a mailing list that informs DBE’s about contract bids coming up and
about seminars on how to bid for state jobs, etc. In no way should it grant
preferential status to DBE bids, the result of which means taxpayers fork out
more dollars than by going with the lowest bidder. Anything beyond a nominal
expenditure wastes the public’s money, as demonstrated in the cases of Shreveport,
Alexandria, and New
Orleans with their own versions that serve more to redistribute citizens’
wealth than to work efficiently on their behalf.
This also includes programs that
force quotas onto larger contractors, in specifying that certain percentages of
the work must go to non-white/non-males/disabled/local residents regarding
themselves and counting any subcontractors. Again, open competition through the
market, not overregulated redistribution guided by state industrial policy,
provides the most efficient use of taxpayer resources and best stimulates
economic growth.
Interestingly, in another part the
report ends up internally contradictory. It stumps for more rational use of tax
exceptions, then stumps for some of these directly controlled by DED which
probably cost more money than the tax revenues they create (but avoids
mentioning the most
wasteful of all, the Motion Picture Investor Tax Credit). It also can’t
help but shill for unions by recommending the shuttling of state dollars that
could go into community colleges for workforce training into unions to do the
same.
Yet in the final analysis the
document presents only a watered-down version of liberal industrial policy.
Considering what’s coming from other transition teams, it with the transportation version may end up the least offensive
of the bunch. In those to come, expect wholesale flogging of Jindal
Administration policies while neglecting to address, much less salute, those
that brought the state benefits when these clash with the leftist ethos that
will permeate their texts.
After all, we must forget the past policy
failures of liberalism, which controlled this state until recent years, that Edwards wants to resurrect despite their delivering the state far from the top in all good indicators and close to the bottom in
all of the bad , because with his inauguration begins the Year Zero.
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