WSJ
 
 March 13, 2012 
California's Greek Tragedy 
No one should write off the Golden State. But it will take  massive reforms 
to reverse its economic decline.

 
By _MICHAEL  J. BOSKIN_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=MICHAEL+J.+BOSKIN&bylinesearch=true)
  and _JOHN  F. COGAN_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=JOHN+F.+COGAN&bylinesearch=true)
  
Long a harbinger of national trends and an incubator of innovation,  
cash-strapped California eagerly awaits a temporary revenue surge from Facebook 
 
IPO stock options and capital gains. Meanwhile, Stockton may soon become the  
state's largest city to go bust. Call it the agony and ecstasy of 
contemporary  California. 
California's rising standards of living and outstanding public schools and  
universities once attracted millions seeking upward economic mobility. But 
then  something went radically wrong as California legislatures and 
governors built a  welfare state on high tax rates, liberal entitlement 
benefits, 
and excessive  regulation. The results, though predictable, are nonetheless 
striking. From the  mid-1980s to 2005, California's population grew by 10 
million, while Medicaid  recipients soared by seven million; tax filers paying 
income taxes rose by just  150,000; and the prison population swelled by 
115,000. 
California's economy, which used to outperform the rest of the country, now 
 substantially underperforms. The unemployment rate, at 10.9%, is higher 
than  every other state except Nevada and Rhode Island. With 12% of America's  
population, California has one third of the nation's welfare recipients.  
Partly due to generous union wages and benefits, inflexible work rules and  
lobbying for more spending, many state programs and institutions spend too 
much  and achieve too little. For example, annual spending on each 
California prison  inmate is equal to an entire middle-income family's 
after-tax 
income. Many of  California's K-12 public schools rank poorly on standardized 
tests. The unfunded  pension and retiree health-care liabilities of workers in 
the state-run Calpers  system, which includes teachers and university 
personnel, totals around $250  billion.  
Meanwhile, the state lurches from fiscal tragedy to fiscal farce, running  
deficits in good times as well as bad. The general fund's spending exceeded 
its  tax revenues in nine of the last 10 years (the only exceptions being 
2005 at the  height of the housing bubble), abetted by creative accounting and 
temporary  IOUs.  
 
 
 
 
 
 




Chad Crowe 


Now, the bill is coming due. After running a $5 billion deficit last year 
and  another likely deficit this year, Gov. Jerry Brown's budget increases 
spending  next year by $7 billion and finances the higher spending with income 
and  sales-tax hikes. Specifically, he's proposing a November ballot 
initiative  raising the state's top income tax rate to 12.3%, making it the 
nation's  highest, and raising the basic state sales tax rate, already the 
nation's  highest, to 7.75% from 7.25%. 
While Mr. Brown deserves credit for some earlier spending cuts to reduce a  
large inherited budget shortfall, the budget fails to address long-run  
structural problems, counting on a cyclical economic recovery and stock bubble  
for a bailout until the next self-inflicted crisis. Moreover, he's thus far 
 failed to embrace a bold reform agenda to save money, improve services, 
and  restore confidence among the state's beleaguered taxpayers and bond 
holders.  
The ballot initiative's $31 billion, multiyear "temporary" tax increase is  
larger than the "temporary" hike it replaces and its income-tax hike is  
retroactive to Jan. 1, 2012. Worse, it doubles down on excessive reliance on  
high-income taxpayers, especially their stock options and capital gains, 
which  are taxed as ordinary income. During economic good times, it's not 
unusual for  the state to collect one-half of all income-tax revenue from the 
top 
1%. This  extreme progressivity leads to boom-bust cycles of rapidly rising 
revenue  followed by complete collapse. Not surprisingly, the revenue is 
all spent on the  upswing, forcing disruptive "emergency" cutbacks on the way 
down.  
The state's progressive tax-and-spend experiment is broken, threatening 
basic  services, from courts and parks to education and health care for its 
most  vulnerable citizens. Mr. Brown's tax initiative only exposes the state to 
an  ever more dangerous roller-coaster ride.  
No wonder many Silicon Valley CEOs say they won't expand in California  
because of high taxes and burdensome regulation. And no wonder net migration 
has  recently reversed, with hundreds of thousands of workers and their 
families  leaving the state in search of better opportunities.  
California still ranks first in technology, agriculture and entertainment  
among the 50 states. But it is near the bottom in business and tax climate 
and  state bond ratings. It's a complex picture, but at its core is the 
high-tax  welfare state run amok.  
Many Americans fear the federal fiscal train wreck will turn us into 
Greece.  But, barring major change, they need look no further than California 
to 
see what  this future portends. Relying on ever-higher taxes to fund payments 
to an  outsized population of benefit recipients is a recipe for exporting 
prosperity.  That is one California trend that other states emulate at their 
peril.  
No one should write off California. It still has great strengths. And it 
can  turn some of its short-term challenges, such as the pressures from ethnic 
and  linguistic diversity (the state is now 37% Hispanic and 13% Asian), 
into  long-term strengths in the global economy. But the political class must 
face up  to the reality that services will have to be far more carefully 
targeted; the  tax system overhauled with lower rates on a broader base of 
economic activity  and people (almost half of all Californians pay no state 
income tax); and  inefficient state programs reformed to spend less and produce 
far better  outcomes.  
Mr. Brown is a man of ideas, having run for president in 1992 on a bold  
flat-tax agenda. Instead of still more antigrowth tax hikes, he should break 
the  grip on the state legislature of his party's special interests—public 
employee  unions, trial lawyers, teacher unions and extreme environmentalists. 
 
A California renaissance—building on the best reforms in budgeting and 
taxes,  education and welfare, crime prevention and pensions by such leaders as 
Rudy  Giuliani, Jeb Bush, Chris Christie and Andrew Cuomo—is still possible. 
What it  requires is a governor with the vision, determination and 
political will to see  it through.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to