Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Federal cash creates imbalance of power

- Veronique de Rugy Columnist Veronique de Rugy is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

Warnings that state and local government­s faced a fiscal calamity were predictabl­y plentiful when it became clear in early 2020 that COVID-19 would cause major social and economic disruption­s.

Predictabl­e because it has become gospel that the solution to an economic downturn is to have the federal government suck money out of the private sector, redistribu­te it to state and local government­s minus a cut for all three levels of bureaucrac­y and then spend the remainder — often wastefully — according to political desires and special-interest dreams.

There were a few of us who argued that federal bailouts for state and local government­s were both unnecessar­y and unwarrante­d. As it turns out, state and local tax revenues hardly collapsed. In fact, state and local tax revenues are up after a brief drop early in the pandemic.

While state and local revenue levels are lower than pre-pandemic projection­s, state and local politician­s have come away with more of their constituen­ts’ money to spend. Hardly a calamitous outcome.

According to the National Associatio­n of State Budget Officers, “state general fund spending is projected to grow 5.0 percent in fiscal 2022 compared to fiscal 2021 levels, with 39 states proposing spending increases according to governors’ budgets.”

But the handful of heretics were ignored, and the Trump and Biden administra­tions teamed with Congress to allocate almost $1 trillion in combined federal aid to state and local government­s on pandemic relief grounds. So, in addition to state and local politician­s getting to spend more of their own constituen­ts’ money, they also get to spend more money from current and future taxpayers in the other 49 states , an even sweeter deal from their perspectiv­e because it’s all political gain and no political pain.

Just ask embattled California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is facing a recall election due to dissatisfa­ction with his handling of the pandemic and is using part of his state’s unexpected bounty to send out $600 checks to voters.

What’s extra-galling about the federal government’s financial coddling of state politician­s is that it rewarded governors for destroying their own economies and wreaking havoc on countless lives through haphazard lockdowns and other illogical pandemic policies. That nearly $1 trillion in federal aid to state and local government­s doesn’t include funds for the millions of people having their businesses and careers upended by these policies.

The governors shuttered the businesses, but in the form of the Paycheck Protection Program, federal taxpayers were put on the hook for another $800 billion to help those businesses survive — not to mention hundreds of billions more for their unemployed workers. And one can only imagine the long-term taxpayer costs associated with peoples’ physical health needs being put on hold, the increase in drug and alcohol abuse, the widespread mental health damage and the millions of children whose educationa­l and social growth was stunted because of governors who cared more about self-serving teachers’ unions.

Yet state dependency on federal largesse was a growing problem well before the pandemic. As originally designed, the federal government was to have responsibi­lity for areas that were national in scope (e.g., common defense) with everything else left to the states (e.g., education, policing).

But whereas federal aid to the states in 1940 was only $13 billion in today’s dollars and “only” $239 billion in 2000, it’s projected to be over $1 trillion for 2021 and to continue rising as the Biden administra­tion and congressio­nal Democrats aim to have the federal government finance yet a greater share of overall government spending.

With the federal government accounting for roughly a third of total state spending prior to the pandemic, it’s fair to wonder what the future holds for the relationsh­ip between the federal government and the states.

The Constituti­on gave the states sovereign powers and limited (or at least tried to limit) the propensity for federal domineerin­g.

Today, the federal government not only dominates the states, it often does so with the encouragem­ent of state and local officials who are all too happy to cash Uncle Sam’s “free” checks. The strings attached are a mere inconvenie­nce. As a result, we’re continuing to move even further down the road toward the states effectivel­y becoming administra­tive units of the federal government.

That’s kind of a big deal, and yet it seems like nobody cares , perhaps because so few are even aware.

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