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Opinion: Budget surplus should not be wasted


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By George Runner

We’ve all heard dramatic stories of lottery winners acquiring hundreds of millions of dollars only to declare bankruptcy a few years later.

In fact, studies show 70 percent of all individuals who suddenly receive large amounts of money will lose it in a short period of time.

The cause of this problem is impulse spending by people who incorrectly assume they will never have to worry about money again. They spend as much as they want on whatever they want, making permanent financial decisions with their one time earnings.

George Runner

George Runner

This year, California essentially won the lottery when it comes to the budget. The governor’s budget proposal shows nearly $20 billion more in revenues will be generated during the next fiscal year than was collected three years ago.

Years ago, during the Davis administration, California found itself in a similar situation. As vice chair of the Assembly Budget Committee at the time, I remember sitting in Gov. [Gray] Davis’s office as he personally promised to show fiscal restraint with the state’s large revenue windfall.

Unfortunately, Gov. Davis ultimately caved to pressure from legislative Democrats and authorized ongoing spending with those temporary revenue dollars. Gov. Davis said all the right things, but his actions spoke louder than his words.

Despite Gov. [Jerry] Brown’s assurances, the messages we are hearing from the majority party indicate we may be on track to repeat these fiscal mistakes. Much like an irresponsible lottery winner, legislators can’t seem to fight the impulse to spend extra money as soon as it’s in the bank.

Our increased revenues are primarily the result of temporary tax increases that will soon expire and volatile capital gains that can disappear at any time. California cannot solve its long-term budget problems by relying on these temporary and unreliable solutions.

However, to go along with this new revenue, we’ve already seen proposals for increased spending. For example, Democrats in both houses of the Legislature have already thrown their support behind SB837 (Steinberg), a bill that will create a completely new school grade. By establishing a “transitional kindergarten” program available to every 4-year-old child in California, SB837 will rack up a price tag of nearly $1 billion by the year 2020.

These kinds of new, permanent spending proposals expand government, but do nothing to invest in the private sector.

Recently, a prominent Democratic elected official even called for the extension of Proposition 30, the temporary tax increases Californians imposed on themselves to get out of the fiscal hole of overspending.

The majority party is already planning on making this latest round of “temporary” tax increases permanent before they expire. Job creation and economic growth is the pathway to preventing future financial trouble for California.

Our long term problems will only be solved if Gov. Brown resists the impulse to spend our new surplus. We need to learn from the budget mistakes of the past, before it’s too late.

George Runner represents more than nine million Californians as a taxpayer advocate and elected member of the state Board of Equalization.

 

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Comments

Comments (5)
  1. dumbfounded says - Posted: February 14, 2014

    Stop spending until there is more than just a new-math “surplus”.

  2. rock4tahoe says - Posted: February 15, 2014

    Yes! Gov. Brown has a Surplus for California! After years of some Arnold cartoon character running the state into the ground.

    Mr. Runner, didn’t you forget something in your article? ENRON!!?? You cannot have a conversation about California’s budget problems in the early 21st Century without mentioning the $27/28 Billion they stole from us.

    Gov. Davis had a rainy day fund before ENRON, and yes he had to spend it after the crooks rigged our electrical grid.

  3. Old long Skiis says - Posted: February 15, 2014

    Kelley, Thanks for the kind words. I just said what I thought needed to be said. Thanks again, OLS

  4. Biggerpicture says - Posted: February 15, 2014

    Hey Rock, let’s not forget about the 70 million Darrel Issa cost the state on a frivolous recall election that gave us the Govinator.

    It’s a shame that Californian’s were duped into believing the Enron rolling blackouts and the DotCom industry crash of the late 90’s were the fault of Gray Davis.

  5. reloman says - Posted: February 15, 2014

    No one thinks these things were Earl Greys fault. However what cost him his job was telling the people that the budget was fine up to his reelection and then very very shortly after the election we were multi tens of billions of dollars out of balance. He should have told us this after the election. It was not just enron(that mostly cost the people and utilities of the state, not so much the goverment) He also was not very effective in getting power plants online when the enron crunch came. I would much rather pay down bonds that cost much much more over time. This will save money in the form of lower annual bond payments for the tight years