You know when a document thanks
several organizations and individuals for expertise in its report and singles
out by name, among the government agencies and interest groups and academicians, the
rancher, mega-landowner and royalty recipient, and insurance agent Public
Service Commissioner Foster
Campbell, that the proposal has diluted its gravity with politics and
ideology. Campbell, who has no expertise in economics or fiscal matters but who
led the group as a co-chairman, likely got the mention because of his herpetic
pushing over the decades of the tired and discredited
notion of an oil processing tax to replace the severance tax that therefore
naturally had to find its way into the document.
The facile
populist belief behind it maintains that some alleged surplus profits of
oil companies plus the 98.5 percent of the country that resides outside of the
state would pay for it, forgetting that state concerns consume a much higher
proportion – at least 28 percent – of the processing maximum and that the tax
gets passed along to consumers. That such a measure would go into effect in era
with low worldwide prices putting on the ropes the industry in Louisiana and,
as a result of the soft market, excess refining capacity brimming outside the
state makes it not just a stupid idea, but absurdly so.
Yet plenty of other material in its
pages serves to covey the unserious nature of the effort. For example, in its
discussion of tax reform, it exhorts any changes to make the system even more
regressive than already – even though, according to a metric created by the
leftist Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, the state ranks 19th most “fair”
(progressive) and that in reality its regressive elements, such as the
nation’s highest homestead exemption (which increases local demands for revenue
sharing), the state sales tax exemption on many items for individuals, and the
Earned Income Tax Credit (despite which the committee recommended for an
increase) cause major drains on revenues.
In fact, it contains one recommendation
that would make the system more regressive, increasing the range of items
subject to sales tax, a broadening of the contribution of the sales tax in
revenue-raising once
blasted by Edwards as a legislator. It also included another regressive
item, a useful recommendation to exclude a certain initial amount of the base
value of immovable property from the homestead exemption, as previously but
unsuccessfully pursued in the past.
Very disappointingly, even as it
cites efforts by both the Louisiana
Association of Business and Industry and the Committee
of One Hundred on this topic as references, it dismisses many good ideas
from these reports. For example, the LABI report makes extensive
recommendations on restructuring fee revenue with an eye (besides bringing
increased rationality to this structure) towards shuttling more of that money
to spending items of higher priority, while the committee’s document
essentially ignores that.
That omission echoes a larger theme
of the report: it focuses too much on trying to scrape up money and not enough
trying to use it smarter and at an appropriate amount. Stunningly, it cites as
a problem in need of surmounting that “Louisiana voters have been told that all
is well and that government can continue to provide critical public services
without any need to increase the revenue required to fund those services” –
even though state
and local governments have a demonstrable spending problem where if
Louisiana just spent at the same per
capita level as similar states it would run a surplus next year of $3
billion. Despite that fact, the document alleges the state cannot sustain much
more in the way of cuts.
In conjunction with that, it claims
few efficiencies remain to curtail spending. For example, it advocates a hike
in gasoline taxes, even though transportation
dollars could go much further in reducing the road construction backlog
with different prioritization without raising the price at the pump, as
Louisiana already ranks 13th among the states in per capita road expenditures.
So, despite its lip service that
revenue increases should come after spending reductions, recognize this
exercise primarily exists to excuse tax increases to feed the monster. It’s
ideological cover to use a crisis to inflict more harmful than good fiscal policies
on Louisiana.
It does endorse some useful
technocratic changes in addition to a few other specific beneficial proposals.
Yet recognize that the end product serves more to pursue an agenda than to provide
valuable advice to deal with Louisiana’s fiscal situation going forward.
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