Media
Fresh Start, or Stale Policies of Decades Past?
At the beginning of 2015, we heard a lot about a “fresh start” for Pennsylvania. But nine months later, it's difficult to identify anything fresh about Gov. Wolf's tax, borrow and spend plan.
In fact, Philadelphia Daily News columnist John Baer pointed out that every Pennsylvania governor since the 1970s has raised taxes. Reading that, I naturally thought, “Yeah, well maybe we should stop doing that.”
Some Democrats argue that tax increases are part of responsible governing, noting that every governor elected since the '70s – Milton Shapp, Dick Thornburgh, Bob Casey, Tom Ridge, Ed Rendell, Tom Corbett – raised taxes (the argument is Corbett's fuels-tax hike for $2.3 billion in road and bridge repairs counts).
But Republicans say maybe that's the problem. Maybe the state's economy would be better with lower taxes.
Nate Benefield, of the conservative Commonwealth Foundation, makes the case against raising taxes: “Overall, our tax burden has gone up, and yet we have stagnant growth, among the slowest in the country.”
Pennsylvania's ranking in state and local tax burden, according to the respected D.C.-based Tax Foundation, is 10th heaviest among states and third heaviest among the most populous states, behind New York and California.
In other words, for 45 years Pennsylvania politicians have been raising taxes—resulting in anemic job growth, income growth and population growth.
- Since 1970, spending has increase by an inflation-adjusted $13,800 per family of four, or $3,450 more per resident.
- As a result, Pennsylvanians labor under the 10th highest tax burden in the country, up from 20th in 1977 and 25th in 1991.
- From 1970 to 2014, Pennsylvania has ranked a dismal 49th in job growth, 45th in personal income growth, and 48th in population growth.
Ironically,Gov. Tom Wolf suggests his $4.6 billion, $1,400 per family of four tax increase represents a new way of doing things in Harrisburg. Raising taxes to historic highs, while rejecting real pension reform or liquor privatization, isn't fresh or innovative. It's the same thing we’ve been doing for decades.
It’s time we stop repeating the same failed mistakes of the past.