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When government gets too small

By WAYNE GREENE Senior Writer on Apr 15, 2011, at 10:21 AM  Updated on 4/15 at 10:21 AM



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David Blatt World file


David Blatt, director of the Oklahoma Policy Institute, made an interesting argument that state government is getting too small Friday morning at the Dilly Deli.

During a recession that has caused consecutive years of state budget cuts, some have argued that the state has had a chance to “right size” its government.

Whether it’s right or not, the smallering of state government is moving ahead.

Next year’s state spending is likely to be about $500 million smaller than this year’s budget, which was smaller than the year before that.

Funds the state has relied on to buoy its budget partially in the first part of the recession – federal stimulus money, the state’s rainy day fund, and accounting tricks – are largely played out.

Although state tax revenue is up from last year, it hasn’t gotten back to pre-recession levels, and because of tax cuts and other fiscal decisions, state spending isn’t likely to get to pre-recession levels until 2014, Blatt said.

“The end of this is not in sight,” Blatt said. “We don’t see any real recovery.”

Blatt points out that the state is in 49th place in the nation in teacher pay, second in the nation in its number of deficient bridges, and that state employees haven’t have a pay raise in five years.

“There’s not much more you can cut without causing real harm to families and businesses,” he said.

Conservative argue that money spent on state taxes is money not invested in business, and Blatt said there is some truth to that.

But, he pointed out, business growth depends on government adequately providing police protection, educating a work force, enforcing commercial laws in the courts, efficiently issuing permits, controlling the spread of disease, providing an adequate transportation network, maintaining marketplace controls that result in consumer trust and funding research.

All of those core government services are undercut by the “new fiscal reality” at the state Capitol, he said.

“Government may have gotten too small,” he said.
WAYNE'S WORLD

OK, OK: Here's an easier American history quiz

Coworkers have been riding me all day that my American history quiz on Monday’s front page was too hard.

At first, ...

How time will not heal old wounds

Healing historic injustices – whether they are five years old or 5,000 – starts with acknowledging them, a retired diplomat ...

Good news from the recession? Fewer homes hitting property tax cap

The number of local homeowners who see their property tax assessments go up 5 percent automatically every year is decreasing, ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

Wayne Greene

918-581-8308
Email

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