Dust-Up

Can California survive 'no new taxes'?

Bill Boyarsky says California needs a complete tax-structure overhaul. Bill Bradley says Arnold Schwarzenegger, despite his words, has never been completely averse to raising some taxes.
September 16, 2008

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Today's question: Will Arnold Schwarzenegger be able to fulfill his promise to never raise taxes? Previously, Boyarsky and Bradley debated whether California is better off under Schwarzenegger.

Fix the entire tax structure
Point: Bill Boyarsky

As was often the case when I worked at The Times, there was no way to answer the editor's question. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has been all over the lot when it comes to taxes, pledging not to raise them, offering complex and odd revenue "enhancements" and, most recently, according to legislative sources, proposing a temporary one-cent sales tax increase to close the budget gap.

So the pledge has been broken, at least by intent.

The question asked by the editor today should have been, "How should Schwarzenegger and the legislators redo a tax structure that is too inelastic to support the always-changing needs of a dynamic state?"

California's revenue stream relies too heavily on the personal income tax. This is an unsteady source, subject to sharp declines when the economy slumps, as it is doing now. As Schwarzenegger put it, "We have a tax system that does not reflect the 21st century California."

I have been writing about taxes since I first covered Sacramento more than 40 years ago, and have witnessed many attempts to revise and improve the tax structure. Each effort has failed, a victim of the incredible mixture of economic and social interests that dominate policymaking in the Capitol.

In my early years, I spent a huge amount of time covering efforts to reform or limit property taxes, which were increasing fast and provoking great anger from homeowners around the state. Despite this tide of protests, neither legislators nor governors could agree on a solution. The result was Proposition 13, which limited property taxes and shifted much of the obligation to finance schools and other traditionally locally funded programs to the state.

Everything that has followed has been a reaction to that taxpayer revolt. The result has been a series of piecemeal fixes that still leaves state government a prisoner of ups and downs in the economy. These fixes have been the product of negotiation and deal-making, usually taking place in the final days of a legislative session. Secrecy in legislating has become the norm in Sacramento, and Schwarzenegger, who was elected in a recall by promising change, has not been able to change that.

The solution should be found in the Capitol, in the offices of the governor and the legislators. I know that term limits have crippled the process. I understand that gerrymandered districts have resulted in the election of lawmakers who are the prisoners of the far left or right of their respective political parties.

A first step would be to make the budgeting process more open. Decisions that resulted in the Legislature's poor budget were made behind closed doors by a few leaders, most of whom are relatively inexperienced. We should return to the days of full and open legislative hearings on the budget and taxes, with experts and others participating and lawmakers advised by experienced and nonpartisan staff members.

There are a lot of smart people available to help. With the process open and discussion encouraged, Sacramento may figure out a way to improve a tax structure that was ailing long before Proposition 13.

Bill Boyarsky, a writer for Truthdig and LA Observed, is the author of "Big Daddy: Jesse Unruh and the Art of Power Politics." He was a political reporter, columnist and editor for The Times.

No new taxes? No way
Point: William Bradley

Arnold Schwarzenegger clearly cannot keep to a no-new-taxes pledge. The logic of the situation won't allow it -- unless he wants to follow along with the "get-out-of-town" budget cobbled together by Republican and Democratic legislative leaders, which kicks the can farther down the road by taking no-interest loans out of Californians' pockets.

Incidentally, as I reported this morning on New West Notes, Schwarzenegger has reserved TV time tonight for a statewide address on the chronic budget crisis. I fully expect him to become the first governor in history to veto a California state budget.

Let's look at the history of Schwarzenegger on the tax issue.

It's frequently presumed, and certainly pushed along by the far right, that he made a no-new-taxes pledge when he won his first landslide election as governor of California in the 2003 recall election. Although he gave off such atmospherics, he didn't say he wouldn't raise taxes. He said he would probably have to raise taxes in the event of a big disaster. How big a disaster? What kind of disaster?





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1. and finally ... "Now, taxes on labor as it is exerted, on wealth as it is used as capital, or on land as it is developed will clearly discourage production -- much more than taxes levied on laborers whether they work or play, on wealth whether used productively or fruitlessly, or on land whether cultivated or left idle." check out the lvtfan blog if you can handle more than 650 characters!
Submitted by: lvtfan
11:50 AM PDT, Sep 17, 2008
 
2. 650 characters ... not much when there is something important ... Easy to squelch thoughtful commentary! HG continues... The method of taxation is, in fact, just as important as the amount. A small burden poorly placed may hinder a horse that could easily carry a much larger load properly adjusted. Similarly, taxes may impoverish people and destroy their power to produce wealth. Yet the same amount of taxes, if levied another way, could be borne with ease. A tax on date trees caused Egyptian farmers to cut down their trees; but twice the tax, imposed on land, had no such result.
Submitted by: lvtfan
11:49 AM PDT, Sep 17, 2008
 
3. There are taxes which damage the economy, and there are taxes which don't. Which taxes we choose does matter. As Henry George (1839-1897) put it: "It is obvious that all taxes come from the product of land and labor. There is no source of wealth other than the union of human exertion with the materials and forces of nature. But equal taxes may have very different effects on production, depending on how they are imposed.
Submitted by: lvtfan
11:47 AM PDT, Sep 17, 2008
 




Doyle McManus: On his overseas trip, the president was met with a lot less cheering and a lot more tough talk.


   
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