Edwards attempt to forestall right-sizing of state
government hinges on finding new revenues to support a bloated state sector.
Trumpeting budget deficit after budget deficit best accomplishes this
objective. Thus, any organic creation of new revenues – i.e., a larger tax haul
without raising rates or scrapping exceptions – puts a dent in this plan as it
reduces the deficit, relieving pressure on instituting permanent new revenue
sources – particularly his preferred progressive income taxation especially on
corporations or fewer exceptions where the bulk of newly-unshielded dollars
would come from transactions disproportionately undertaken by higher-income entities.
Thus, his administration has tried to throw cold
water over the beneficial
impact tax cuts passed the Republican-led Congress and signed into law by
GOP Pres. Donald
Trump would have on the projected fiscal year 2019 budget for Louisiana. Reviewing
those changes, and only partially, the Edwards Administration said it would
mean a boost of $200 million to $250 million for FY 2019. That covers only
individual income tax collection; the Administration has abjured from
estimating the impact that corporate tax cuts would produce, so the figure
could go much higher.