From 42nd to (at best?) 32nd

The American Legislative Exchange Council has released its fifth annual business climate comparison, Rich States, Poor States.

I call it a business climate comparison. The authors call it a comparison of the states on the basis of their policies, or lack thereof, that “expand free markets, promote economic growth, limit the size of government, and preserve individual liberty.”

I’ll pause now while the lefties scream themselves hoarse over ALEC and its fascist beliefs in economic freedom, prioritizing government spending, reducing corrections spending, free-market environmentalism and better health care reform than ObamaCare.

I’ll pause again while those who still have some voice left complain that you can’t make comparisons from one state to another, and how dare you say bad things about Wisconsin. That viewpoint on a different but related subject was typified by Zach Brandon, former secretary of the late state Department of Commerce, who posted here last week that “Wisconsin could use less scorekeepers and more ‘economic marketers.’”

Brandon is correct on the second count, but economic marketers don’t get any help from state government, the work of which, regardless of which party has been in charge of what, has been derided for decades by the results of every state business climate comparison, regardless of what organization does them, and regardless of their criteria. Wisconsin politicians don’t like business climate comparisons for two reasons. They first demonstrate that the things state and local government does to excess — namely, taxes and regulation — are the sorts of things that make businesses decide to build new facilities or expand elsewhere. (Related is that the state’s quality of life, vaunted by every Wisconsin politician, has less importance than Wisconsin politicians might like, and the state’s education system is overrated, in the sense of student performance, as businesses see it.)

Business climate comparisons also expose the failures of government policy in Wisconsin for the past decades. Indeed, past and present Democrats and past Republicans would love you to not notice that the cumulative results of their efforts have made this state among the worst in the country as a place to do business. That suggests that there haven’t been enough economic scorekeepers — enough people paying attention to the subpar economic performance of this state before the late 2000s recession — not too many.

Rich States, Poor States compares the 50 states on their economic performance over the past decade, based on the past decade’s per capita personal income growth, domestic migration (where a positive number indicates more people moving in than moving out, and a negative number indicates the reverse) and non-farm payroll employment growth.

The economic performance ranking demonstrates the craptacular performance of the governors and legislatures of the 2000s: 42nd. That’s an improvement from last year: 44th.

I don’t know how you can possibly spin these numbers positively. The first and last graphs show that even when the country was doing well, in the mid-2000s, Wisconsin trailed the nation in putting money in Wisconsinites’ pockets and in employment growth. The middle graph shows that since the mid-2000s shows that people who have the ability to leave Wisconsin have been leaving Wisconsin to a much larger extent than people have been moving here.

The next chart, the states’ economic forecast, is based on 15 equally weighted factors, including top marginal personal and corporate income tax rates, property and sales tax burden, “recently legislated tax changes,” debt service as a share of tax revenue, a survey of the state liability system, average worker compensation costs, whether the state is a right-to-work state, and the number of tax expenditure limits in state law.

Wisconsin ranks 32nd, one ranking better than where it ranked in 2008, nine below where it ranked in 2010, and two worse than last year.

Note where Wisconsin ranks in “recently legislated tax changes” during the last year of the epic failure that was the 2009–10 Legislature, and the first year of the supposedly improved 2011–12 Legislature. We have one of the highest corporate income tax rates in a country that now has the highest corporate income tax rate in the world. But could the Legislature be bothered to cut either personal or corporate income taxes? Nope.

There is an inverse relationship between taxes and economic growth. The study places Wisconsin fourth worst in state and local taxes, with, as of 2009, state and local taxes sucking up 11 percent of personal income, 17 percent more than the national average of 9.38 percent of personal income. Not surprisingly, from 2001 to 2010 Wisconsin’s gross state product increased only 35.3 percent, three-fourths of the national average of 46.61 percent. Nonfarm payroll employment growth dropped 2.8 percent, whereas the nation’s grew 0.51 percent.

And for those who think Wisconsin is an outlier, the study’s authors reply:

Not one of the high tax burden states has grown as fast as the average low tax burden states … not one. In fact, there is not one high tax burden state that has grown as fast as the average state in the nation — again not one.

Wisconsin does have the limit on tax revenue growth that applies to school districts and counties, but that hasn’t prevented other taxes from increasing, has it? Wisconsin also does not have spending limits on state government or municipalities (more on that tomorrow), and it has neither required voter approval for tax increases (except for school district building projects or exceeding the revenue limits) nor a legislative supermajority requirement for tax increases.

There is a rationale for not cutting taxes that the report notes:

In 2011, Wisconsin faced a $3.6 billion budget deficit due to overspending, accounting gimmicks, and increases in unfunded pension liabilities. And, after residents and business owners faced years of unfair tax increases, Gov. Scott Walker was in a particularly tough position to either raise taxes again on hardworking taxpayers or find places in government to trim.

Making the decision to put Wisconsin on a path of fiscal accountability, Gov. Walker reined in government worker benefits by proposing a bold, and indeed controversial, plan to pull the state out of debt: Act 10. …

As contentious as Act 10 has been, the results are in and Wisconsin is already reaping the benefits of these legislative changes. As of September 1, 2011, the state had already saved $162 million. Additionally, local school districts have used their new freedom to make decisions locally, saving local taxpayers $300 million. …

These results are truly remarkable, and we commend Gov. Scott Walker for standing up for Wisconsin taxpayers and putting government on the track of fiscal sustainability.

Fine praise, except that Walker’s reforms didn’t go far enough. The “track of fiscal sustainability” does not include increasing spending. Walker’s 2011–13 budget did not cut spending. No definition of “fiscal sustainability” includes balancing the state’s books on a cash basis — the sort of thing you’d expect of a business with $200,000 in sales, not $35 billion in spending — instead of on a GAAP basis. No one in the Legislature is pushing correct budgeting because it must not be politically convenient. Walker’s budget also cut no state employees. He’s not going to get any credit from Da Union for not cutting employees, so he should have gone ahead and slashed the state payroll to fund meaningful tax cuts.

A forecast that Wisconsin will have the 32nd best economic growth in the nation is unacceptable regardless of who is in charge in this state. We know from our experience with the previous governor and Legislature that a return to Democratic control in Madison will make 42nd place look like a good year. But there is a long list of things that still need to be done, including reducing state employee headcount, taking a meat cleaver to the regulation factories in Madison, and cutting state income taxes. And if the recalls in May and June, and then the legitimate elections in November, don’t go the right way, none of that will happen. And it won’t happen anyway unless voters make Govzilla go on a starvation diet.

On Tax Day minus one

Sunday was not Tax Day because Tax Day never occurs on a weekend. Today is also not Tax Day because it’s Emancipation Day in the District of Columbia, whose government employees get today off.

(Given that Emancipation Day is about emancipating slaves in the District of Columbia, and given that Ripon is the birthplace of the Republican Party, which was founded on ending slavery, you’d think Ripon would have the day off too.)

Emancipation Day has nothing to do with taxes, although as the Troglopundit puts it …

The cheerful website called The Economic Collapse passes on 24 horrifying facts about the disaster area that is the federal tax code, which include:

1 - The U.S. tax code is now 3.8 million words long.  If you took all of William Shakespeare’s works and collected them together, the entire collection would only be about 900,000 words long. …

3 - 75 years ago, the instructions for Form 1040 were two pages long.  Today, they are 189 pages long. …

6 - Our tax system has become so complicated that it is almost impossible to file your taxes correctly.  For example, back in 1998 Money Magazine had 46 different tax professionals complete a tax return for a hypothetical household.  All 46 of them came up with a different result.

7 - In 2009, PC World had five of the most popular tax preparation software websites prepare a tax return for a hypothetical household.  All five of them came up with a different result. …

10 - When the U.S. government first implemented a personal income tax back in 1913, the vast majority of the population paid a rate of just 1 percent, and the highest marginal tax rate was just 7 percent. …

12 - The United States is the only nation on the planet that tries to tax citizens on what they earn in foreign countries. …

16 - Sadly, as Bill Whittle has shown, you could take every single pennythat every American earns above $250,000 and it would only fund about 38 percent of the federal budget.

17 - The United States has the highest corporate tax rate in the world (35 percent).  In Ireland, the corporate tax rate is only 12.5 percent.  This is causing thousands of corporations to move operations out of the United States and into other countries. …

23 - The number of traffic accidents spikes each year right around April 15th.  The following is from a recent Bloomberg article….

Deaths from traffic accidents around April 15, traditionally the last day to file individual income taxes in the U.S., rose 6 percent on average on each of the last 30 years of tax filing days compared with a day during the week prior and a week later, according to research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

24 - Most of the tax debate is focused on income taxes, but the truth is that Americans pay dozens of other taxes every single year.  The following are just a few of the taxes that many Americans pay….

#1 Building Permit Taxes

#2 Capital Gains Taxes

#3 Cigarette Taxes

#4 Court Fines (indirect taxes)

#5 Dog License Taxes

#6 Federal Unemployment Taxes

#7 Fishing License Taxes

#8 Food License Taxes

#9 Gasoline Taxes

#10 Gift Taxes

#11 Hunting License Taxes

#12 Inheritance Taxes

#13 Inventory Taxes

#14 IRS Interest Charges (tax on top of tax)

#15 IRS Penalties (tax on top of tax)

#16 Liquor Taxes

#17 Luxury Taxes

#18 Marriage License Taxes

#19 Medicare Taxes

#20 Property Taxes

#21 Recreational Vehicle Taxes

#22 Toll Booth Taxes

#23 Sales Taxes

#24 Self-Employment Taxes

#25 School Taxes

#26 Septic Permit Taxes

#27 Service Charge Taxes

#28 Social Security Taxes

#29 State Unemployment Taxes (SUTA)

#30 Telephone Federal Excise Taxes

#31 Telephone Federal Universal Service Fee Taxes

#32 Telephone Minimum Usage Surcharge Taxes

#33 Telephone State And Local Taxes

#34 Tire Taxes

#35 Toll Bridge Taxes

#36 Toll Tunnel Taxes

#37 Traffic Fines (indirect taxation)

#38 Utility Taxes

#39 Vehicle License Registration Taxes

#40 Vehicle Sales Taxes

#41 Workers Compensation Taxes

When you account for all forms of taxation on the federal, state and local levels there are many Americans that pay out more than half of their incomes in taxes. …

Even with the ridiculous level of taxation in this country and this state, neither is able to spend just what it takes in, of course. The state budget remains in GAAP deficit of nearly $3 billion, and the feds … well, none of us can probably count that high. But what does this all get us?

They buy us a massively bloated government that wastes money on some of the craziest things imaginable.

Millions of Americans work for the federal government, and yet most of them produce very little of real economic value.  The following comes from a recent National Review article….

By 2005, the federal government employed 14.6 million people: 1.9 million civil servants, 770,000 postal workers, 1.44 million uniformed service personnel, 7.6 million contractors, and 2.9 million grantees. This amounted to a ratio of five and a half “shadow” government employees for every civil servant on the federal payroll. Since 1999, the government had grown by over 4.5 million employees.

According to that same article, when you add in state and local government workers the numbers are even more dramatic….

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, there are 3.8 million full-time and 1.5 million part-time employees on state payrolls. Local governments add a further 11 million full-time and 3.2 million part-time personnel. This means that state and local governments combined employ 19.5 million Americans.

I figured you wanted to start your week on a happy note.

Presty the DJ for April 16

The number one British single today in 1969:

Today in 1969, MC5 demonstrated how not to protest a department store’s failure to sell your albums: Take out a Detroit newspaper ad that says “Fuck Hudsons.”

Not only did Hudsons not change its mind, Elektra Records dropped MC5.

Detective Kenneth Hutchinson of a California police department had the number one single today in 1977:

The number one album today in 1983 was Bonnie Tyler’s “Faster Than the Speed of Night”:

The number one album today in 1994 was Bonnie Raitt’s “Longing in Their Hearts”:

Birthdays begin with Henry Mancini:

The producer of two huge ’70s movies, Robert Stigwood:

Dusty Springfield:

Gerry Rafferty:

Stephen Singleton of ABC:

Green Bay native Dave Pirner of Soul Asylum:

One death of note today in 1999: Skip Spence, an original member of Jefferson Airplane: