Fiction: State governments are facing a dire fiscal crisis and will have to cut general services, fire civil servants, and cut health care for the poor.The federal government should send cash to the states to prevent such drastic measures.
Fact: The federal government should not send money to state and local governments simply because they are run by fiscally irresponsible politicians. State government budget deficits do not represent actual spending and receipts; they represent planned spending and receipts.Since many states were planning to increase spending, these cuts in spending cannot represent a cut in existing services.
As a result of the robust economy in the 1990s, state tax revenues rose. Despite the economic downturn that followed, many state governments had planned their expenditures based on rising tax revenues.The resulting deficits, therefore, are a result of higher planned spending and lower planned receipts.In fact, state and
local governments almost always plan - and follow through with -
spending increases.State and local government spending has grown
steadily since 1944 and has grown faster than the rate of inflation
since 1982.[1]State employment rose
0.6% and local government jobs rose by 1.4% in December 2002 while
the number of private jobs decreased by 0.4%.
Consider these figures: From 1995 through September 2002, after
accounting for all transfer payments (including welfare and
unemployment insurance), state and local spending rose 5.9% per
year.However, over the same period, receipts excluding all federal
grants rose 4.5% per year.[2]Clearly, state and local
officials have a history of over-extending their budgets.
It is true that rising Medicaid costs also attribute to state
deficits, but this is a reason to reform the program, not to send
more money to the states.One of the reasons that Medicaid's costs
continue to rise is the system of federal matching funds.States
have an incentive to spend more, even in the midst of an economic
slowdown, out of the fear of losing federal funds.
The simple
truth is that politicians are afraid to make the hard choices and
decide which programs will not receive more money.As a consequence,
elected officials try to scare people into voting for tax
increases.Neither raising taxes nor sending more federal cash to
states will force these officials to act responsibly.
Footnotes
[1] See Dennis Cauchon, "
State, Local Spending Up Despite Downturn," USAToday.com
[2] See Gene Epstein, "The Meat-Cleaver Awards," Barrons, January 6, 2003, Pg. 30.