The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Media -- Dont Quote Me  |  News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In

Hey guv: stop slashing!

State budget cuts just make the recession worse
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  December 31, 2008

090102_chart_ian
VAST GAP Comparing income growth for the bottom 20 percent of Americans, the middle 60 percent, and the top 1 percent. CREDIT Lane Kenworthy, University of Arizona, Congressional Budget Office data.

It seems as if there’s no light at the end of the state’s gloomy fiscal tunnel.

The recession has caused tax revenues to plummet. The cost of government has been higher than expected. Our governor and legislators, Democrat or Republican, uniformly feel they must respond by radically cutting the state budget. They’ve already cut — and are sharpening the knives to cut deeper — funds for public schools, community colleges, university campuses, and services for the old, poor, sick, mentally ill, developmentally disabled, and prisoners. And many services have been serially slashed for years.

Just last April, the Legislature sliced away $118 million from the state’s current two-year budget. Then in November Governor John Baldacci cut another $80 million. He’s asking the new Legislature to approve that move, and on December 16 he announced he wants to cut another $15 million, besides taking $45 million out of the state’s reserves.

And officials project a colossal $840-million shortfall in what had been a $6.8-billon General Fund budget for the next pair of fiscal years (called the biennium), beginning July 1. Since human services and education make up 80 percent of the budget, they will continue to be the big targets. For the same period, a $556-million hole has appeared in the $1.2-billion state highway fund, which is financed largely by a tax on gasoline.

Curse the recession, which may become the biggest economic downturn since the Great Depression. But there is a huge irony in the response of Maine politicians to the recession — an irony first appreciated in the 1930s: Putting aside the waste of not educating young people as well as they could be, putting aside the unfairness and cruelty of not caring properly for the most vulnerable in society, most economists agree that cuts in the state budget make the recession worse.

Cuts mean layoffs for state workers and local teachers (school budgets depend on state aid), as well as for people at nonprofits that receive state money to care for the needy, and at firms dependent on government contracts. The “ripple” effect hits stores and other businesses indirectly reliant on government spending. With more people out of work and spending less, income- and sales-tax revenues will decline, but more people will need state services. It’s an economic whirlpool.

Economists agree that in a recession the government should increase spending to stimulate economic demand, to get the economy moving again. “Economics is really clear on this point,” says University of Maine at Farmington economist John Messier.

In the 1930s, when Democratic President Franklin Roosevelt fought the Depression with massive federal-government spending, putting into practice the new theory of British economist John Maynard Keynes, Roosevelt was partially thwarted by state and municipal budget-cutting. The same cross-purposes are now being set up.

President-elect Barack Obama, another Democrat, is preparing to spend as much as $850 billion in an economic stimulus to make over America’s infrastructure — to repair highways, bridges, and schools, and institute society-wide energy conservation and the development of alternative energy sources.

Thus, Maine governmental budget slashing is “the exact wrong thing at the wrong time,” Messier says.

1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |   next >
Related: Instead of cuts: guts, The wrong man for hard times, A mighty wind, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Barack Obama, Politics, Alternative Energy Technology,  More more >
| More
Add Comment
HTML Prohibited

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 04/23 ]   "Hip-Hop 9.1.1."  @ Roxbury Community College
ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   LOCK-UP LESSONS  |  April 14, 2011
    Fixing Maine’s troubled prisons is not an impossible task. In fact, if the state treated adult inmates more along the lines of how it treats juvenile offenders, prison critics — including, surprisingly, the new corrections commissioner, Joseph Ponte — think the prisons might not only become more humane, they might actually “correct” the prisoners.
  •   LEPAGE KISSES THE PHOENIX  |  February 23, 2011
    We are savoring the moment. It won't last long.
  •   AT A TURNING POINT  |  February 09, 2011
    When Joseph Ponte was told that Maine's longtime corrections commissioner Martin Magnusson had once informed the Legislature's Criminal Justice Committee, after a dramatic hostage-taking, that there were "probably 300 inmates right now with a weapon in their hand" — and that nobody at the committee meeting seemed disturbed by this information — Ponte's reaction was "I would be extremely perturbed by that."
  •   NEW CORRECTIONS COMMISSIONER NOMINATED  |  January 27, 2011
    Joseph Ponte, 64, a veteran warden for the nation's largest private-prison operator, the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), has been nominated by Republican Governor Paul LePage to be the state's Corrections commissioner, replacing Martin Magnusson.
  •   'NO-TOUCH TORTURE' IN NEW JERSEY  |  January 26, 2011
    Deane Brown, a Maine inmate shipped out of state because of his criticism of the Maine State Prison, is now being held in New Jersey in "one of the most repressive" prison units in the country, often reserved for "political" or activist prisoners like black radicals, says Bonnie Kerness of the American Friends Service Committee's national Prison Watch.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2011 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group