Advertisement

Prop. 30 compounds state’s bad tax policy, but we need it anyway

Share
Capitol Journal

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown’s tax proposal is terrible public policy. Plain and simple. But it offers the only plausible path to rescuing California schools from more painful budget slashing.

So it’s not so simple.

Politics is the art of the possible, to quote the 19th century German politician Otto Von Bismarck. Brown’s Proposition 30 is a political work of art crafted to meet the voters’ approval Nov. 6.

“This is the politics of the practical, the doable,” says the ballot measure’s chief campaign strategist, Ace Smith. “It’s not Plato’s Republic—not like the perfect government system that we’d draw from the textbooks.”

Advertisement

INTERACTIVE: 2012 California Propositions

That is undeniable.

Prop. 30 is lousy policy because it moves in the opposite direction of badly needed tax reform in Sacramento. It would make the state’s roller-coaster tax system even more volatile and unstable.

The nonpartisan legislative analyst points this out in his explanation of the measure in the Official Voter Information Guide mailed to Californians: “Due to swings in the income of upper-income taxpayers, potential state revenue fluctuations could complicate state budgeting in some years.”

Just what Sacramento needs: More budget complications, driving school boards and city councils nuts and leading to yet-lower credit ratings.

Under Brown’s soak-the-rich plan, California would become even more dependent on the wealthy and their capital gains.

He would raise state income tax rates by one percentage point for single-filers earning more than $250,000, by two points for those making more than $300,000 and by three points on earnings exceeding $500,000. Double those income thresholds for joint filers. The current top rate is 10.3%.

Advertisement

Actually, California already is too dependent on the personal income tax, period.

Currently, the tax provides roughly two-thirds of the state’s revenue. Three decades ago, it amounted to only around one-third.

Here’s the volatility problem: The top 1% earn 21% of the state’s personal income but pay 41% of the tax, according to the latest figures, from 2010. So when there are ups and downs in the economy—and fluctuations in the earnings of the rich — they are exaggerated into peaks and valleys in Sacramento, resulting in an unreliable revenue stream.

“Prop. 30 has no tax reform and makes it worse,” complains Gerald Parsky, an investor, former University of California regent and chairman of two tax reform commissions whose recommendations were ignored in Sacramento.

“People say, ‘Prop. 30 is not reform, but look at what happens if it fails.’ My answer is that maybe Sacramento then will have to adopt real reform quickly. More revenue is needed, but only if there’s real reform.”

Reform, Parsky and many contend, includes extending the sales tax to services.

Here’s another reason Prop. 30 is bad policy: It especially socks small businesses, which tend to pay the personal income tax rather than the corporate tax.

“Our members are at wits’ end,” says John Kabateck, who heads the California office of the National Federation of Independent Businesses. “They’re mom and pops and don’t have much of anything left in the till” after the recession. “Many have reached the edge and feel that Prop. 30 is going to push them over.”

Advertisement

But what makes Prop. 30 politically plausible is that the vast majority of voters would not pay the higher income tax rates. They can say, “The governor won’t be taxing me, he’ll be taxing that rich guy behind the tree,” to paraphrase the late Louisiana Sen. Russell B. Long.

They’ll only be paying a token quarter-cent sales tax increase that Brown tossed in as a small gesture toward fairness.

Polls reflect the political wisdom of this strategy. In a state that historically has rejected statewide tax hikes, Prop. 30 is being supported by a slight majority in what’s looking like a tossup contest.

Meantime, a rival tax measure by wealthy civil-rights attorney Molly Munger is trailing badly in the polls—for the simple reason that it would boost income taxes for everyone except the very poorest. That’s better public policy, but losing politics.

Munger’s Prop. 38 would raise roughly $10 billion annually, most of it flowing directly to schools and avoiding the state Capitol.

Brown’s proposal would generate $6 billion a year and would be used for budget-balancing as well as schools.

Advertisement

If both pass — not a likelihood — the measure drawing the most votes would prevail.

The compelling reason to support Brown’s proposal is a negative: If it fails, $6 billion in state spending cuts automatically will be triggered. The governor and the Legislature agreed on the trigger cuts when they enacted this year’s budget.

Not just any spending cuts, but $5.4 billion for K-12 schools and community colleges, plus $250 million each for the two university systems.

That K-12 whacking is the equivalent of chopping three weeks off the school year. At the universities, student tuitions would soar again.

Munger’s measure couldn’t prevent the trigger cuts even if it did prevail. Its tax hikes wouldn’t take effect in time.

In the abstract, Prop. 30 is bad policy. But in the practicality of the moment, it’s needed to protect California’s desperate schools.

There are plenty of reasons to vote against Prop. 30: The bullet train extravagance, hidden parks money, Sacramento can’t be trusted, the governor should have exercised more leadership and handled the problem himself in the Legislature.

Advertisement

Brown doesn’t deserve to win Prop. 30. But the students do.

george.skelton@latimes.com

Advertisement