Posted on 01/09/2004 4:57:48 PM PST by Amerigomag
I've been listening all afternoon to the media about the "massive" spending cuts proposed by our new governor. Well here are the numbers compared to the budget proposed just one year ago.
Total Spending -- increased 2.8%
Education K-12 -- decreased 1.8%
Health and Human Services -- increased 5%
Higher Education -- increased 6.7%
Business, Transportation and Housing -- increased 0.7%
Courts -- increased 2.2%
Tax Relief (principally the VLF) -- increased 293%
Local Government Subventions -- decreased 9.6%
Youth and adult Corrections -- increased 1.5%
Resources -- decreased 51%
Enviornmental Protection -- decreased 20%
State and Consumer Services -- increased 4.5%
Other -- decreased 29%
On another thread, the proposed 2004-05 budget is $99.1 Billion, or about the same as what passed last year ($98.9 Billion according to a summary on the LAO's page) after the Democrats tacked on a few billion to Davis' proposal. That would only be a 0.2% increase.
I particularly like the statements from schools and jails - "We will have to lay off teachers and cut school days", "We will have to let prisoners out".
All the while up to 25% of school budgets are non classroom teachers and administrators and the State spends monies on cultural awareness programs instead of keeping Johnny Wife Beater in jail.
Yup, that qualifies as a "massive" decrease in spending all right!
I was looking at the $99+ billion dollars budget proposal and wondering where we had seen that figure or anything approaching it before. Deja puuu :-\
WE'll see what ends up rolling out on the showroom floor after all the re-engineering is done..
I hope they have some money budgeted for air in the tires on this "lean mean" budgetmobile.
What bothers me is that normally you expect to get less than you ask for during a negotiation.
Since Schwarzenegger is proposing more spending than in previous years, I'm sure the legislature will oblige him and then some. California is obviously headed for the largest budget in it's history if the bond passes. A budget that will be more than 20% out of structural balance.
I suspect the "he's a fiscal conservative" gang will slide into silence over the next few months.
I'm also beginning to believe that the "let it go broke" gang may be pointed in a sound fiscal direction with regard California's immediate, legislative problems. It won't "go broke" but the legislature will be forced to curtail it's spending.
Enviornmental Protection -- Cal EPA, Air Resources Board, Water Resources Control Board, etc. -- $0.846B or 0.8%
Local Government Subventions -- local government's share of the property taxes including the VLF -- $2.571B or 2.6%
All three budget subdivisions add up to 6.2% of proposed expenditures.
There just aren't any magical answers. ;-)
All predictions rest with the fate of Prop 56, 57 and 58. This forum may be real entertainment after the March primary.
Our next scheduled fun period will be after the deadline Schwarzenegger imposed on the legislature for state comp reform legisltaion
Not at the state level anyway. Either everyone's ox gets gored or we wait patiently hoping California's GDP will out pace the drain from the consequences of unregulated immigration.
Well, we're doing exactly the same thing at the Federal level. We're raising future taxes through debt so that we can have lower taxes now.
In fact, if you take California's deficit and multiply it by ten (California has about ten percent of the United States' population), California's budget problems compare pretty favorably with the current budget problem at the federal level. ;-)
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