A year ago the state
of Illinois
was at the edge of a fiscal crisis.
This was brought on primarily by bad government and a public pension
plan that needed enormous contributions, money that was not available from the
public coffers. As a result Illinois enacted some
tax increases and a lot of budget cuts.
The state still tops many lists of states likely to go under.
How did this happen?
The basic way these things always happen, greed and stupidity.
California's
financial situation worsened this year after the courts and the federal
government blocked hundreds of millions of dollars in cuts to healthcare
programs, and Democratic lawmakers refused to make reductions Brown wanted in
March. In addition, taxes fell short of expectations, particularly in April,
the most important month for income taxes.
So what is going to
happen? The usual, massive cuts in
social programs, education, law enforcement and the like.
It's
a significant setback for Brown, who began his return engagement in Sacramento by promising
to get the budget back under control. Advocates expect the state's financial
problems to take an even greater toll on welfare and healthcare for the poor;
state workers are also bracing for cuts.
And who is to
blame? Well as usual the Republicans
shoulder a large part of it. They wouldn't let Californians vote on a tax plan because they were afraid voters would vote the wrong way. (You just can't trust voters in a democracy can you, which is why Republicans don't really like this democracy thing.)
When
he took office last year, Brown wanted to ask voters once again to extend the
Schwarzenegger-era tax hikes. But Republicans blocked his effort to place the
issue on the ballot in a special election last spring. Those levies, and other
tax changes proposed by Brown, would have been worth $12 billion in the current
budget year, according to the Department of Finance.
But this deficit gap
is large enough so that everyone shares the blame. Gov. Brown wants to make up part of the
shortfall with higher taxes, but here is one answer to that
Jack
Pitney, a political science professor at Claremont McKenna College, said the
bad news about the deficit could complicate Brown's push for higher taxes. He
said voters may think, "You can't even handle the money we've already sent
you. Why should we send you more?"
So the state will be
enacting policy to cut spending, reduce the quality of life and maybe raise
taxes. Hence the not very optimistic
outlook. And no, this Forum does not
have any better suggestions, so don’t ask.
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