Weekly Opinion Editorial
POLITICAL
COURAGE NEEDED TO NOT RAISE TAXES!
by Steve Fair
In Sunday’s Tulsa World, Oklahoma billionaire
oilman and banker George Kaiser wrote an editorial weighing in on the state government
budget shortfall. In a piece titled, ‘8
myths about Oklahoma,’ Kaiser ,
makes a case Oklahoma can tax its way to prosperity. Kaiser, a big supporter of
former President Obama, is known for advocating for liberal causes. He is also a generous man. Kaiser has given away over one half billion
dollars to various causes, most involving alleviating poverty and early
childhood education.
In the guest op/ed piece, Kaiser called
the Laffer Curve the ‘laughter curve,’ stating supply side economics doesn’t
work and states that tax the most have the best economy, but the facts prove
otherwise. In the 1920s, 1960s, and the
1980s, the federal government cut taxes and tax revenue increased. A rising tide lifts all boats. Art Laffer was right. Kaiser also contends lowing taxes does not
generate economic development and prosperity, but states with lower tax rates
are growing in population at a much faster rate than states with high taxes. It stands to reason that business and
industry follow population. When a state
starts losing population, their business and industry isn’t far behind. People
tend to migrant to areas with lower taxes.
In Kaiser’s #3 myth, he states Oklahoma
government’s budget can’t be balanced by eliminating waste. “We
have long ago cast off the frills and fat and are now deep into the muscle,”
Kaiser wrote. It appears most Oklahoma GOP
lawmakers agree with him. Little or
nothing has been said about identifying and eliminating waste in state
government. Lobbyists and bureaucrats
have effectively convinced legislators there is nothing left to cut. Perhaps that is case in rare instances, but
why are legislators simply taking their word for it? Wouldn’t it be prudent to fund performance
audits conducted by the established constitutional office- State Auditor &
Inspector- on every agency or entity that gets a dime of taxpayer dollars? That sounds too simple of a solution, yet no
one has proposed it. Why? The simple answer is Oklahoma government has sacred
cows legislative leadership doesn’t want to take on. As late
Labor Commissioner Mark Costello used to say: “The sacred cows belong next to
the mashed potatoes.”
Kaiser is wrong about there not being
waste. There is waste and lack of productivity
in every organization. It is not likely
Oklahoma government is the exception to that rule. Most efficiency experts estimate the norm for
waste in government in general is between 15-20%. The challenge is finding the waste, and bureaucrats
are experts at hiding it. For some
reason, lawmakers lack the political will to go after the sacred cows. Perhaps they should talk to their constituents. A 2014 Gallup poll found taxpayers believe
that government- at all levels- wastes 51 cents of every dollar they collect. It is doubtful half of all of Oklahoma tax
dollars are being wasted, but there is waste.
Rest assured, Kaiser doesn’t operate his
businesses like state government. In
order to remain viable, he must be competitive in the marketplace and stay
profitable. When revenue is down, Kaiser
must adjust staff accordingly. He isn’t
in business to lose money. Government never has a layoff. Seldom is an agency closed or consolidated. Government expands. Kaiser can afford to pay more taxes, but can
the average Oklahoman who has been laid off from the oil patch? Government should adjust to the levels of revenue
available.
Kaiser concludes his op/ed by stating the
way to balance the budget is to raise taxes.
He advocates increasing the gross production tax back to 7%, eliminating
wind energy tax credits, raising cigarette and fuel taxes and taxing
merchandise brought over the internet.
Sound familiar? Those are the same
proposals the Republican governor and GOP led legislature have proposed. It’s getting hard to tell the conservatives from
the liberals. Kaiser claims raising
taxes takes political courage, but the truth is it takes more courage to not
raise them.
Every state agency has been cut deeply for multiple years in a row. Any "waste" was shed about eight budget failures ago. How can you not acknowledge the Billions of dollars of reductions in state income for years in a row?
ReplyDeleteEven Dave Ramsey will tell you to get a second job to increase your income when facing astronomical debt. Cutting expenses only goes so far in any budget. Schools have closed, state parks are going to close and even Inhoff is warning us that the current budget will cause road work in process to stop completely.
Nobody wants high taxes but there is a point where they get too low to function. How can you honestly not look at the state we are in see the scary truth?