Steve Waguespack: LABI gives low marks for 2015 session
By Steve Waguespack
Knowledge is power, but as Albert Einstein once said, “information is not knowledge.”
This week, the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry has released its 2015 scorecard for the Louisiana Legislature. The scorecard will be available on LABI’s website at www.labi.org/scorecard and will give Louisiana voters a clear and easy way to see exactly how their legislators voted this session on bills that impacted the private sector economy and Louisiana’s employers.
In short, the grades are in and they are not very good. This detailed information will be freely accessible for everyone to see and the hope is that it will give each and every voter of this state the information they need to make an informed choice in the fall elections.
Speaking of choice, throughout the regular legislative session, lawmakers repeatedly insisted their only choice to invest in priorities such as higher education and health care was to raise taxes. The reality is there were many other options that could have been placed on the table to do so. The Louisiana Legislature not only failed to structure the tax increases to minimize harm to jobs and the economy, but also refused to control government growth, make reductions in less critical services or even debate structural reforms to the state budget that would allow lawmakers to prioritize needs across state government each and every year.
Quite simply, Louisiana is a tale of two states. In the private sector, multi-billion dollar expansions and developments are underway. There are record-breaking numbers of workers, and the state’s Gross Domestic Product is at an all-time high. On the other hand, in the public sector, Capitol insiders bemoan the fiscal woes of state government even as the state’s budget has swelled from $16 billion in 2004 to more than $24 billion this year.
Just prior to the national recession, Louisiana experienced substantial but temporary growth as a result of a post-Katrina bubble, where federal dollars and a temporary increase in tax revenue related to rebuilding dramatically inflated the state’s budget.
While the government’s budget certainly decreased from that peak in 2008, it has largely stabilized the past couple of years. Still, the state budget has grown on average almost a billion dollars a year over the past 10 years.
That unsustainable growth rate must be brought back to reality.
Our state budget problems are not due to a lack of taxpayer dollars. They are due to a maze of lock boxes and dedicated funds that prohibit existing tax dollars from being eligible for higher education and health care. They are due to a lack of will to address the rising entitlement costs that siphon off millions of dollars every year from the classroom. They are due to overlapping and duplicative bureaucracy and overhead that make our government more expensive than critically necessary to be responsive to our residents.
Rather than address any of these items, lawmakers maintained that their only choice to fund priorities like higher education and healthcare was to raise taxes this legislative session. The reality is there were many more options available.
The rhetoric used to justify these tax increases on employers to maintain the operations of state government at current levels often did not match the substance of the bills.
Throughout the session, policy makers regularly opined that “big business” could afford to pay more taxes, frequently using the term “corporate welfare” to define credits and incentives that exist solely to help offset a tax code that is deemed broken and uncompetitive by national and Louisiana experts alike.
However, the reality is that all businesses in Louisiana will be directly affected by the taxes enacted in 2015: multi-national corporations, home-grown Louisiana companies, start-ups and entrepreneurs, and small businesses on every corner in the state.
The impact of additional taxes will be felt by employers in every industry sector – petro-chemical, technology and digital media, telecommunications, oil and gas, retail and restaurants, and maritime and ports, among others.
While legislators publicly advocated for a universal “haircut” in their rhetoric throughout the session, the private sector alone was handed the bill and required to pay it.
Without question, a traditional Louisiana populist agenda won this session. The budget passed by the 2015 Legislature and signed into law by the governor:
—Spent more than $600 million in new taxes on critical components of a healthy economy, such as inventory, electricity and research.
—Made no attempt to address the structural problems in the state budget that have plagued the state for years and is decided by policymakers and experts alike.
—Maintained the overall size, scope and structure of state government, which is almost $9 billion larger in 2015 than a decade ago.
—Failed to reform or restructure nationally-high levels of state support for local government, making no reduction whatsoever to these annual subsidies.
—Utilized no viable analysis of tax credits to focus on those least harmful to the economy and actually ignored existing facts, research and data.
—Spent millions more on K12 public schools to pay for increasing costs primarily due to entitlements without making any reforms or demands that dollars be prioritized for the classroom.
—Provided a COLA for state pension recipients (that the governor eventually vetoed) that raised immediate concerns by national rating agencies and directly circumvented pension reforms that were passed just one year earlier.
—Made no reductions whatsoever to certain areas of state government, including the legislative budget which received zero cuts and to the judiciary budget, which actually grew this year to account for salary increases for judges.
The fact is that – even before these sizeable tax increases go into effect – tax collections in Louisiana were already projected to increase over the next five years.
That tax revenue growth projection, which was due to an expanding economy, is now in question.
Steve Waguespack is president and CEO of the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry.
- Log in to post comments
