Learning to sort
out the governor’s good ideas from his nutty ones
By CINDI ROSS
SCOPPE Associate
Editor
THE KEY to evaluating a Mark Sanford budget — or any of the
governor’s proposals, for that matter — is understanding that there
is no such thing as “The Sanford Policy.”
There are two separate and distinct “Sanford policies,” which
occasionally coincide but more often are artificially jammed
together in a vain attempt to look like a coherent whole.
There is the pragmatic, real-world policy that seeks to address
real problems, that produces common-sense solutions that any
objective observer would embrace: Don’t spend money you don’t have.
Don’t inadvertently commit yourself to a course of action by
thoughtlessly making what appear to be inconsequential choices.
Don’t cling to the status quo when it doesn’t meet your needs.
Then there is the ideological policy, which insists on solving
“problems” whether they exist or not. This policy — borne of a
quasi-religious belief that government is evil and bad and wrong —
almost always manifests itself in the same mandate: Reduce
government’s size, its scope, its authority, its influence; but
above all, reduce.
One of the clearest examples of interplay of the two Sanford
policies was on display last week, when the governor previewed his
later budget roll-out by unveiling a “Fiscal Fitness Challenge” to
the Legislature. It’s useful to examine the challenge not just
because it offers such a neat illustration of the dichotomy, but
also because its individual parts are built on bedrock Sanford
principles.
The challenge was heavy on solutions to real problems: Reduce our
state’s practice of using one-time money to fund ongoing needs — the
practice that contributed as much as the recession to years of
painful budget cuts. Stabilize the state retirement system — a goal
whose practical importance should be obvious to anyone. Repay trust
funds we’ve raided and pay off bond debt — both of which make sense
in their own right (the former more than the latter) but also better
position the state in case the nation drops back into recession.
But thrown in with those pragmatic proposals, and dressed up to
look as though there was a rational connection among them all, was a
purely ideological, government-must-be-slashed proposal: Cap the
growth of state spending to the rate of inflation plus population
growth.
That idea might sound great if you are part of that tiny sliver
of society that shares the governor’s extremist anti-government
ideology. (Likewise, both that one and the pragmatic proposals are
evil incarnate if you are part of that tiny sliver of society that
is convinced that government is always right and should always do
more, grow larger.)
But like the rest of Mr. Sanford’s libertarian ideas, it is
frustratingly maddening if you are part of the vast majority of
practical, commonsense, pragmatic people — along the lines of the
practical, commonsense, pragmatic side of Mr. Sanford — who believe
that the proper role of government is to do that which government
needs to do, to do it as efficiently as possible, and to do it
well.
Mr. Sanford’s artificial cap on government spending stems from
his contention that government in South Carolina is growing out of
control — by his reckoning, at 29 percent more than the national
average.
But there is a big flaw in his logic. Even if you believe that
Mr. Sanford’s numbers present an accurate picture of reality — and I
am not at all convinced that they do — they are irrelevant to this
proposal:
If government is too big, or too inefficient, then allowing it to
grow at even the rate of inflation plus population growth would be
wasteful; it should be cut, not grown less rapidly.
If, on the other hand, government does not have enough money to
provide the programs and services that the public agrees need to be
provided, then a cap like this is destructive: It merely maintains
the status quo, thus ensuring that government will never be able to
provide the programs and services that the public agrees need to be
provided. And as we all know, clinging to the status quo is bad ...
at least, that’s what the practical Mark Sanford believes.
Mr. Sanford tried to sound practical about the ideological cap
last week, explaining that he was worried that the national economy
was still at risk, and he didn’t want to overcommit the state when
another recession might be just around the corner. That’s a
defensible position.
The problem is that Mr. Sanford was pushing for this sort of
limit before we knew what the recovery would look like, back when we
were still in a recession. And the reason he’s talking about it now
is not because he wants to affect next year’s budget — in which
there won’t be enough money to even reach the cap— but because he
wants to bully the General Assembly into committing itself to this
artificial limit in perpetuity.
Understanding the difference between the two types of proposals
Mr. Sanford lays out is useful to the public. For legislators, it’s
essential — so they will be able to accept the practical ideas and
reject the ideological ones.
Ms. Scoppe can be reached at cscoppe@thestate.com or at
(803)
771-8571. |