The Mercury News

Should California borrow more or tax more to cope with COVID-19?

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

The state budget that Gov. Gavin Newsom signed earlier this summer had been hastily adjusted to cope with projection­s that state revenues would plummet by tens of billions of dollars due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the sudden recession it sparked.

Neverthele­ss, it was a budget based on hope — that the federal government would provide as much as $14 billion in emergency aid so some spending could be restored, and that the recession would be relatively brief.

In the final month of the 2020 legislativ­e session, however, neither of those hopeful scenarios appears likely to occur and state finances could be submerged in red ink for years.

That likelihood grates on the Capitol’s dominant Democrats, who have long yearned to spend heavily on social welfare, medical and education services for the 15-plus-million California­ns living in poverty, or near-poverty — and who are even worse off now.

Democratic politician­s, therefore, have been busily drafting elaborate schemes to generate more money, generally falling into two categories — borrow more or tax more.

The borrow-more faction, which includes the legislativ­e leadership, has floated a $100 billion plan to “securitize” various revenue streams — using them as collateral for loans. It also would borrow money from personal and corporate income taxpayers by inducing them to prepay future taxes with discounts.

The downside of the scheme is, of course, that money borrowed and spent now must be repaid later, thereby reducing resources when the loans come due — unless, of course, taxes are also raised later to close the shortfall.

The tax-more faction is a coalition of left-of-center organizati­ons, particular­ly public employee unions, and their legislativ­e allies. Their plan, contained in Assembly Bill 1253, would impose surtaxes of 1% to 3.5% on taxpayers with taxable incomes over $1 million a year and raise perhaps $6 billion a year.

California already has, by far, the nation’s highest personal income tax rates and the approximat­ely 80,000 individual or joint taxpayers who would be hit by the proposed surtaxes already pay about 40% of income tax revenues.

Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago, a Los Angeles Democrat who is the lead author of AB 1253, told a Senate committee hearing this week that “We are talking about people who are doing very well in the state of California while others are hurting.” He said he wants them “to pay their fair share.”

Several factors underlie the tax-the-rich debate, which isn’t a new one.

One is that relying on so few taxpayers is fiscally dangerous, as past experience has shown. The incomes of the rich are especially volatile because a high percentage are capital gains, thus making state tax revenues especially volatile. Adding surtaxes would make revenues even more unpredicta­ble, creating even deeper deficits during economic downturns.

Another is that the rich can minimize their taxable incomes by leaving capital gains untapped. They also can — as some already have — avoid California’s taxes by moving their residences to low- or no-tax states such as neighborin­g Nevada.

Moreover, the recent federal tax overhaul that limited the deductibil­ity of state and local taxes increased their net impact and gave wealthy taxpayers another incentive to minimize state-taxable incomes.

Finally, $6 billion, as large as that number sounds, is small potatoes in a budget deficit that’s many times larger. But AB 1253’s enactment — which is very unlikely this year — could also undermine another tax increase that many of its backers also support. That’s Propositio­n 15, which, if passed by voters, would increase property taxes on commercial buildings such as warehouses and hotels by about $12 billion a year.

 ?? DAVID CRANE — SCNG FILE PHOTO ?? Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago is the lead author of AB 1253, which would impose surtaxes of 1% to 3.5% on incomes over $1 million a year.
DAVID CRANE — SCNG FILE PHOTO Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago is the lead author of AB 1253, which would impose surtaxes of 1% to 3.5% on incomes over $1 million a year.

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