California fell almost $2 billion below estimates in
personal income taxes paid in April.
The Legislative Analyst Office says that the state is some $3.5 billion
behind the state forecasts for this year which are the basis for the current
budget. Thus, the legislature will again face
cuts. More cuts to schools, more
cuts to social services, health care,
child support, police and fire protection.
This
approach to economics is called austerity. It doesn’t work. Austerity is being tried in Greece, Italy, Spain, Great Britain, and Ireland, among others. It does not work. Austerity makes the economy worse – and thus further reductions of tax
receipts and further cuts.
The economic crisis of 2007 to the
present made matters worse. The
state took in some $30 billion less in taxes and thus had less to send to the
schools. School budgets have been
cut by some $10 billion. K-12
education receives about 40% of the California budget. Thus any decline in the state budget
leads directly to cuts in school services.
The
question for the corporate agenda, promoted by the Chamber of Commerce among others is can the economy prosper with a poorly
educated work force. California
grew and prospered from 1970- 1994 based upon a well educated work force. Then, in the 1994-2008 period over $10
billion of tax cuts were passed – making the current crisis much worse. This week we learned that Apple, and other corporations, are avoiding over $10 billion in taxes by moving one small office to Nevada. California suffers from a decade of corporate tax cuts and public disinvestment. Today, instead of following the education approach, conservative anti tax forces have imposed an Mississippi
approach on California.
California public schools are in
crisis- and they are getting worse. This is a direct result of massive budget
cuts imposed by the legislature and the governor in the last four years. Total per pupil expenditure is down by
over $1,000 per student. The result- massive class size increases. Students are in often classes too large
for learning. Supplementary
services such as tutoring and art classes have been eliminated. Over 14,000 teachers have been dismissed,
and thousands more face lay offs this fall. This is not the fault of teachers.
California
schools are now 47th. in the nation in per pupil expenditure and 49th
in class size. Our low achievement
scores on national tests reflect this severe underfunding.
California suffers from a decade of
disinvestment in education and in infrastructure. We need to invest in roads, bridges,
telephone lines, communications systems, parks, clean energy and quality
education. These are the down payments that make prosperity possible. The Republican Party is blocking all efforts to raise taxes
ignoring the undeniable historic
fact that prosperity depends upon having a viable educational system and a well
functioning infrastructure. And
the Democrats in the legislature and the governor’s office are simply saying, “we
must cut”, the Republicans make us do this.
We have a stalemate at the state and
national level and this government dysfunction makes the current
depression last longer. We will have an opportunity in November to stop the decline, but not to reverse the policy.
As Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said, "Taxes are what we pay for civilized society.''
No comments:
Post a Comment