The Community Connection

Spend-first, tax-later in Pennsylvan­ia

- Nathan A. Benefield is vice president of policy for the Commonweal­th Foundation, Pennsylvan­ia’s free market think tank.

Last June, Gov. Wolf sparked a fiasco by vetoing the General Assembly’s budget in its entirety. The resulting 9-month impasse crippled nonprofits and threatened to shutter schools across the state. To avoid the political fallout of a repeat performanc­e this year, the Legislatur­e passed a spending plan Wolf says he’ll sign.

One problem: Lawmakers never said how they’ll pay for it.

Strangely, that was part of the plan. One legislativ­e leader bluntly stated, “We want to agree on a general appropriat­ions bill, and then we’ll get to work on how to pay for it.”

That’s not how budgeting should work — just ask any family or business. It’s easy for the Legislatur­e to say they’ll spend 5 percent more this year than last. It’s harder deciding how to make those ends meet.

Legislator­s and the governor have declared “broad-based” tax increases off the table. But they are considerin­g a new tax on natural gas consumptio­n.

This would raise home-heating bills for 2.7 million Pennsylvan­ia homeowners — families, seniors, low-income households, and small business owners who use natural gas. In other words, a “broad-based” tax increase by another name.

Pennsylvan­ians can also expect a major cigarette tax increase. This tax falls disproport­ionately on low-income households, while increasing smuggling across state lines.

Pennsylvan­ia already heavily relies on revenue from tobacco, gambling, and alcohol to fill budget gaps — in fact we lead the nation in so-called “sin taxes.” These revenue sources are unpredicta­ble, decline over time, and create perverse incentives.

The state needs Pennsylvan­ians to keep smoking, drinking, and gambling to enable lawmakers’ addiction to overspendi­ng.

Beyond the faulty spend-first, tax-later approach, the budget itself represents the largest spending jump in a decade — $1.6 billion over last year’s budget. This is five times the rate of inflation and population growth.

Politician­s often cite a “structural deficit” to justify such spending increases. However, the “structural deficit” exists only because of years of legislativ­e inaction on pension reform and welfare reform.

Pension costs have skyrockete­d over the past decade as previous legislatur­es and governors ignored calls for reform. Yet, we continue pushing costs onto future generation­s instead of paying now for what we’ve promised.

Welfare spending growth also outpaces the growth of our economy, making it unsustaina­ble for taxpayers.

Unfortunat­ely, the current budget addresses neither of these cost-drivers.

It also does not address the $700 million in corporate welfare subsidies the state doles out at taxpayers’ expense — more than any other state in the nation. Instead, the budget adds $10 million in corporate handouts and pork barrel projects.

Meanwhile, the rush to pass a budget by the deadline after months of procrastin­ation came at the expense of proper scrutiny.

For example, page 400 of the budget bill authorizes the Department of Human Services to borrow an unlimited amount of money from the Worker’s Compensati­on Fund to pay excessive Medicaid bills. There’s no way to know how much this will cost taxpayers.

Similarly, the Senate moved $95 million in spending offbudget, hiding the true cost, though taxpayers will still pay the bill. In reality, the Senate added $74 million in spending to the House’s budget plan.

This new spending won’t reduce the “structural deficit.” Neither will an $18 million increase (plus an $8 million retroactiv­e increase for last year) in the Legislatur­e’s own budget.

Despite these criticisms, taxpayers can be thankful lawmakers rejected Wolf’s call for higher income and sales taxes to fund about $1.7 billion more in spending. The budget also expands the highly successful Education Improvemen­t Tax Credit, which will provide better educationa­l options for thousands of students.

Yet, as it stands, this budget leaves families trapped in a game of tax roulette — praying their taxes don’t go up this year. Next year, let’s hope taxpayers don’t have to choose between an on-time budget and a good budget.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States