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Cost of Government Day (COGD)
[2005] [2004] [2003] [2002] [2001]
Title:
Americans Work Until Today to Pay for Government
Date:
July 11, 2003
Source:
Michael LaFaive, Mackinac Center for Public Policy
Words:
795
Americans
for Tax Reform (ATR) has released its annual report on the
cost of operating all levels of government and paying for
regulations. The report, released Wednesday, notes that Americans
must now work until today, July 11, to earn enough to pay
the bills of government.
ATR, based in Washington,
calls this day Cost of Government Day (COGD),
and it arrives 4.5 days later this year than in 2002. Individual
states have different COGDs. Connecticut has the latest COGD,
which falls on August 3. Michigans COGD was July 9.
Government does
provide valued services to people and plays a vital role in
national defense, and it often operates to secure property
rights and other rights and to enforce contracts crucial
aspects of American individual liberty. But it is worthwhile
to examine at what cost these and other services are provided,
whether they should be provided at lower cost, or at all.
Cost of Government
Day draws attention to government spending and sparks debate
over the appropriate size and role of government, as well
as the amount of taxes required to support it.
The Cost of Government
Day report for 2003 finds, among other things:
Federal spending is responsible for a whopping 45 percent
of the costs associated with operating government;
Americans, on average, must work 10 days longer in 2003 than
just three years prior to pay for the new spending;
The COGD move from July 6 in 2002 to July 11 in 2003 was primarily
the result of four factors: war in Iraq, state spending increases,
business regulations, and the cost of tax compliance;
The state of Michigan ranked 33rd in its COGD relative to
the 50 states; and
State and local spending comprises 43 of the 193 days Americans
must work annually to support their government. This is the
5th straight year that state and local spending have increased.
Americans need an additional 4 days of work to pay for state
and local spending.
Next year the trend in federal spending growth is not expected
to improve. Recent Congressional approval of a Medicare prescription
drug entitlement is expected to cost taxpayers $400 billion
over the next 10 years. This is a dark and portentous policy
cloud that may explode into a thunderstorm of new federal
spending. After all, government social programs do not have
a history of costing less than advertised.
There is some hope
on the horizon, though. President Bush has proposed competitive
contracting for about half of federal activities defined as
being commercial in nature writing software, mowing
lawns, and other routine activities. Bush Administration officials
arent calling it privatization, but that is exactly
what it is and it could save taxpayers billions of dollars.
State spending
reductions in coming years may offset expected increases in
federal spending because states must balance their budgets
by law, and some, such as Michigan, have at least proposed
reducing outlays. The word may is emphasized in
the previous sentence because evidence suggests that some
states are using federal revenues given to them by Congress
to address their current year state deficits by increasing
spending. This would work to offset the savings that might
otherwise move COGD earlier in the year.
In Michigan, the
Mackinac Center for Public Policy has recommended more than
$2 billion in General Fund budget savings in its study, Recommendations
to Strengthen Civil Society and Balance Michigans State
Budget. Implementing those recommendations would go a long
way toward rolling back this years July 9 COGD for Michigan.
Responsible officials
in every state should consider privatization as a tool for
reducing the cost of government. Done right, it can lower
costs and improve services. While controversial government
cost-cutting ideas are debated in distant capitals, Michigan
officials are putting outsourcing ideas into action.
Indeed, according
to the Lansing State Journal, just last week the Michigan
Department of Natural Resources was scheduled to collect proposals
from private, for-profit firms to manage the Porkies,
an Upper Peninsula ski resort owned and operated by the state.
This follows a recommendation in Michigan Privatization Report,
a Mackinac Center journal.
As Michigan legislators
look the states $1.5 billion deficit in the eye, they
would do well to remember that Americans already pay more
than 40 percent of national income to all levels of government.
Legislators should ask themselves, how much is enough?
Should we take 50 percent? Sixty percent? Do we want it all?
Hopefully, the
answer will be a resounding no, and legislators
in our nations capital, and every state capital will
cut spending and taxes to help Cost of Government day come
earlier instead of later.
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Michael LaFaive
is director of fiscal policy and senior managing editor of
Michigan Privatization Report for the Mackinac Center for
Public Policy.
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