In a surprising
admission The Dismal Political Economist will confess that there are some things
he likes about Republican Chris Christie who was elected Governor of New Jersey
almost three years ago. Mr. Christie has
a solid and dedicated belief in equality before the law, and has even appointed
Muslim and Gay people to positions in New
Jersey government.
More importantly, he has vigorously defended his lack of prejudice from
the ugly criticism of his Conservative colleagues.
But Mr. Christie has
the tendency to also vigorously and personally attack anyone who disagrees with
him. The latest involves a budget
projection that is at odds with what Mr. Christie thinks. New
Jersey has a non-partisan budget office serving the
legislature, sort of a state version of the CBO. Mr. Christie wants to cut taxes and balance
the budget.
The Christie
administration wants to take $200 million from the clean-energy fund to plug a
hole in the state’s current budget and withhold money for transportation
infrastructure projects next year to preserve Gov. Christie’s top priority for
2013: implementing a 10 percent income tax cut.
The revised $31
billion proposed budget depends on robust revenue growth that is higher than
that predicted by two Wall Street
rating agencies and the nonpartisan Office of Legislative Services (OLS).
“I’m comfortable with
where we are as of now,” State Treasurer Andrew P. Sidamon-Eristoff said at an
Assembly Budget and Appropriations Committee hearing this afternoon. “I
recognize that it is a risk going forward and we will make adjustments as
necessary.”
So naturally the legislative budget office was
called upon to opine on the fiscal nature of the plan. The Head of that organization forecast a serious
budget deficit for the state. Since New Jersey and its
Republican Governor have championed the Republican policy of cutting taxes and have
strongly argued that such a policy does not produce deficits, Mr.
Christie was outraged that anyone would disagree.
But
David Rosen, budget analyst for the OLS, expects state revenues will grow at
5.5 percent, a full percentage below Sidamon-Eristoff’s estimate for fiscal
year 2013, which begins July 1.
“To
put it simply, revenues are rising too slowly to achieve the year-end targets,”
Rosen testified before the budget committee this morning.
As
the Assembly budget committee grappled with the differing predictions, Christie
amped up the acrimony by calling Rosen, who has served nearly three decades in
Trenton, “the Dr. Kevorkian of the numbers,” referring to the late proponent of
physician-assisted suicide.
Christie,
in comments following a transportation conference this morning in Trenton,
questioned how “anyone with a functioning brain” would believe Rosen, who last
year also disagreed with the state’s budget projections. The governor suggested
that he is beholden to the Legislature, which is controlled by Democrats.
Disagreements on budget projections occur all the
time. And it’s not as if Mr. Rosen does
not have a good track record
The
OLS has predicted a $1.3 billion budget shortfall over the next 14 months under
Christie’s proposed budget, about twice what the state Treasury Department has
estimated. Rosen said it is the largest gap between the two agencies in a
decade. He also noted that since 2000, OLS has had a median margin of error of
3.2 percent in estimating revenues compared with a median margin of error of
3.9 percent for the executive branch.
Now a normal and reasonable person who disagreed with
a deficit projection would state the basis of the disagreement and explain why
they felt their forecast was better. A
bullying Republican Governor would just resort to name calling, which is what
you do when you don’t have a rational and reasonable basis for disagreeing.
No comments:
Post a Comment