Rebane's Ruminations
September 2008
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George Rebane

California is trying to come up with a budget that will fill a $15 billion budget shortfall.  The battle lines are the same ol’ same ol’ ones we have witnessed so many times before.  The voters are of little help in this mess since we stopped teaching civics in high school at least a generation or so ago.  Everyone now believes that state and federal economies react instantly to the whims of the person in the Governor’s Mansion or the White House.  Legislatures are therefore dominated by the same high-sounding scoundrels as always.

In Sacramento the Left wants to pay for its vote-buying programs by again increasing the share of taxes paid by the well-to-do minority.  This means not growing the pie, but just squeezing more out of their Personal_income_2 traditional class enemies.  The Right wants to pay for its vote-buying programs by growing the pie with lower tax rates which, history shows, do generate more government revenues.  But what to do now that less than half the population pays taxes on any kind of productive activity?

The Left are the dominant vote buyers in states such as New York and California.  They do it by using the tax and bribe programs of the populist kind that follow the Peter-Paul Principle.  This means that they take government revenues to fashion social programs and ‘worker benefit’ laws that overwhelmingly don’t work, yet can be easily sold to the sheep who get dumber with each shearing.

The Right fights for lower taxes for the individuals, but somehow still manages to work in corporate welfare programs.  In fact, this and pork (i.e. ‘earmarks’) are the ONLY areas of legislation in which the Left and Right are seen to reliably reach across the aisle year after year.  The Right has a harder job of convincing the voter in these dust-ups because it has to attempt using reason which is an early casualty in any election season.  The Left, unencumbered by such rigors, goes directly for the class warfare arguments – ‘Those sumbiches already have too much and are making too much which they take right out of your pockets, and, if you vote for me, I aim to get some of it back for you.’  What’s not to like?

The above chart shows a little piece of the results.  Since 1990, personal incomes in California have grown about half of their growth in Texas.  And New York, on the socialist bandwagon earlier than California, has an abysmally low growth in personal income.  Californians now pay the highest rate in the land 10.3% state income tax, and those creative Democrats in Sacramento aim to increase this to 12% so that no bribe shall go unpaid while trying to patch the $15B hole in the budget.

The class warriors on both coasts still don’t have a clue that they’re messing with the most mobile class of citizens we have.  For every two people who move into New York, three leave.  And California has now started catching up to this disaster.  Since 1998 California has lost over 1.3 million native-born Americans.  Guess on which end of the earning scale these folks hang out.

At another time we’ll talk about what the Golden State has done to become the former home of tax and salary paying corporations.  Parting quiz question – the insane legislation that continues to pour from under the nation’s domes of knowledge (thank you Ted Owens) is written and sponsored by a) the most experienced legislators, or b) the least experienced legislators?

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9 responses to “Tax and Bribe Programs”

  1. nate Beason Avatar
    nate Beason
  2. DaveC Avatar
    DaveC

    I am waiting for a legislator in Sacramento to table a suggestion changing the CALPERS system. Paying many government retirees 90-95% of their preretirement income is not right.
    I look forward to the day when a legislator steps up to the plate and changes the system from a defined benefit to a defined contribution. Expect lots of flack from the cops, firemen, educators and municipal employees.
    There is a compromise here. Grandfather those already in the CALPERS defined benefit program. Require newly hired government employees to enroll in a defined contribution program. This would also mean newly hired employees would have to contribute to the social security system through FICA deduction.
    Tough row to hoe, but defined benefit programs, especially at the 90-95% preretirement payout is doomed.

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  3. Mikey McD Avatar

    Our “leaders” in Sacramento have failed in the defined benefit fight. THE FACT IS THAT UNIONS ARE TOO POWERFUL. See this post:
    Taxpayers and the Governator vs. Labor Unions
    A great editorial by Daniel Weintraub at the Sacramento Bee illustrates problems within our “democracy.” State officials agree that their is a statewide Unfunded Liabilities crisis (money has not been put where the state’s mouth is…the state has not adequately funded the pensions promised to public employees). His editorial can be read here: http://www.sacbee.com/110/story/646042.html . It seems that the labor Unions run the show. And you thought taxpayers ran the show? Kudos to Daniel for a candid and informative piece.
    http://sesf.typepad.com/my_weblog/2008/01/the-governator.html
    It is perceived as impossible to battle employee unions and get re-elected.

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  4. DaveC Avatar
    DaveC

    The unions were once powerful at Bethlehem Steel, Consolidated Freightways, Delta Airlines, Kaiser and Singer to name just a few.
    At least those formerly employed by the above companies were able to get a portion of their promised benefits from the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation under the rules of ERISA.
    With very few exceptions, California government employees within CALPERS are not covered under ERISA guidelines. The exception being a handful of employee groups or unions, usually small school districts, who elected to manage their own pension plans outside of CALPERS.
    CALPERS is like a mini Soc. Sec. Administration. They dole out pension, medical, widows/children benefits and disability.
    With no pension organization to back CALPERS’ $264 billion in present and future liabilities, when they go bust I seriously doubt any state or federal government entity will step in to help.
    CALPERS demise may be hastened given todays investment cloud and depending on where CALPERS has invested their liquid funds.

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  5. Mikey McD Avatar

    Don’t underestimate the ability of CA to tax, tax, tax enough to bailout CalPERS for CA State employees.
    Most are ignorant that the “local” agencies (cities and counties) that contract with CalPERS are liable for the promises made to employees. Said another way, with respect to local municipalities (Vallejo, Grass Valley, or Nevada County for example) CalPERS is not liable for the mis-management of their funds assets. CalPERS is only a conduit or administration body, with no risk (no liability) to the CalPERS member. When CalPERS fails to earn their 7.75% net of fees expected rate of return the local governments are liable for the losses.

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  6. Mikey McD Avatar

    With respect to CalPERS there are two distinct issues:
    1- CalPERS for CA State employees (this system is unfunded in the billions). The State can Tax to bailout CalPERS FOR STATE EMPLOYEES.
    2- Municipalities contract with CalPERS to act as admin and asset managers. Again, CalPERS does not have ANY risk in this relationship. CalPERS is paid 1% to managed the actuaries and investment portfolio to the best of their ability. Each local entity that contracts with CalPERS accepts the risks inherent in the Defined Benefit plan. Think of CalPERS as nothing more than a messenger to local agencies.
    City of Grass Valley has unfunded liabilities that are 40% of their annual operating budget! Nevada Counties UL is 25% of their annual budget. Our “leaders” (Fed, State, Local) turn blind eyes to this crisis, ’cause they are concerned with re-election, not fiscal responsibility. Just pass it down the line! You and I would be in jail if we pulled such stunts in the private sector. We can trust the government, just ask the Native Americans.

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  7. Mikey McD Avatar

    For more information on Unfunded Liabilities see the following link:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponzi_scheme

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  8. Scott Obermuller Avatar
    Scott Obermuller

    As a 34 year worker for our glorious state government, I find a lot of the comments somewhat humorous. I’m not sure about law enforcement workers, but I can assure you that when I started my employment in 1974 we had no choice about paying social security. If they are going to change the system, they should be given the choice to opt out of SS as should all workers. CALPERS is most definitely not like SS. It may have to be restructured or bailed out at some point, but at least they have actual assets and returns, unlike our criminal federal Ponzi scheme. I would readily agree that there have been bad decisions made lately concerning benefits, but this is not the doings of the state workers or CALPERS. State workers traditionally traded monthly pay for more generous retirement benefits. As the public has benefited from having not had to pay prevailing wages to the state workers all these years, I find it fascinating that now that the predicted bill has come due, some in the public want to change the rules of the game. Another reason I wanted to work for the state was that there would be no union to bother with. That lasted until the final hour of Moonbeam’s term of office and now I am the unwilling vassal of an increasingly socialist bunch of thugs. The union’s ideas and demands are contrary to a properly run government, but those of us who will not join are still required to pay our “fair share” but are denied the right to vote. The unions are working for an ever-expanding work force in state and local government – no matter the economy, as it provides them with an automatic and increasing source of income. As I look at the demographics of California and the abysmal educational system, I really have no hope for a properly funded and administrated government. It is a mirror of what is happening nationally, but as the state and local govts. have no way to print money, they will not be able to go far down the deficit road. I am reminded of what pilots say of a bad landing – “He ran out of altitude, airspeed and ideas” Ouch!

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  9. Mikey McD Avatar

    Scott O, I mirror your thoughts on the Unions (socialist thugs). They are a cancer to this country. But, cancer can only survive as long as the host lives. Is it too much to assume that the union employees see the ills their memberships create?
    A belief held by many in the private sector:
    State employees are among the best paid employees in America (salary, health, pension, vacation, tenure, sick days, vehicles, stress days, traditional 8-5 work day with breaks, etc). Those in the private sector that are compensated well, accept much more risk; they have more “skin in the game.”
    The number of employees working for phone companies, grocery stores, school districts and municipalities that don’t want to be union members is astounding.
    Is there any hope for us in a union run system?

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