(Columbia) April 26, 2005 - The common thread between
a family, business or government budget lies in the fact
that none is perfect. The important questions,
therefore, are – does the good outweigh the bad, and is
there room for improvement?
Although a number of people have worked very hard on
the House and Senate versions of the budget, what I have
seen so far suggests substantial room for improvement on
the big issue remaining – trust funds. With the full
Senate taking up the budget starting this week, South
Carolinians have their last chance to make their voices
heard on this year’s budget. So if you care about the
amount of taxes you just paid on April 15th, or if you
care about limiting the spout on new spending in our
state, I think it’s worth making your view known.
Here are a few important details on this
year’s budget that might be helpful as you weigh whether
or not to get involved in this debate.
As a backdrop to the trust fund issue, I think it’s
worth knowing how much money is budgeted for new tax
relief given the new money that’s coming into Columbia.
Projections show $619 million of new money coming into
Columbia this year, and by mid-May that number could be
around $800 million. I have long believed that you ought
to give people a refund of their own money, a tax cut,
if they are sending that kind of additional money into
government. We pushed very hard to do that this year and
while we lost on the idea of a bigger tax cut, I’d give
credit to Speaker Wilkins, members of the House and a
handful of Republican Senators for the way they
supported us in our efforts to enact a larger income tax
cut over a smaller one.
Unfortunately, there was a big push by some key
Senators, including Senate Finance Chairman Hugh
Leatherman, to limit the tax cut to small business
owners and that position ultimately prevailed. So,
sadly, this year the budget calls for a whole lot of
growth in spending but only $2.5 million of income tax
cuts on the $600-800 million of new money taxpayers are
sending to Columbia.
This brings us to trust funds. I believe very
strongly that if we are not going to return more money
in the form of tax cuts to the citizens of South
Carolina, the first order of business is to repay trust
funds before we begin substantial commitments to new and
additional spending.
A little history on our trust fund balances lies in
the fact that just before I came to Columbia, our state
budget – like so many others across the country –
suffered very serious revenue shortfalls. At this time
policy makers elected to borrow from a wide array of
trust funds in dealing with these budget
shortfalls. In addition to an unconstitutional
deficit that accumulated during this time, roughly half
a billion dollars was also borrowed from these trust and
reserve accounts. Last year, we were able to completely
extinguish the $155 million unconstitutional deficit,
and the question before us now is, given $600-800
million of new money coming into Columbia, what do we do
with the trust funds? I think we ought to pay them down
in a substantial way while we have the opportunity.
Unfortunately, the House and Senate budget writers
see this issue differently. They both allocated about
$117 million of the $600-800 million of new money coming
into Columbia to repaying that half billion owed to
South Carolina trust funds. In our revised budget, we
proposed repaying $362 million. The difference shows up
clearly when you look at new spending, wherein I
allocated $250 million to new spending while House and
Senate budget writers both allocated over $500 million.
All of this leaves me with two thoughts. First, if
you think our government budget shouldn’t grow at a
faster rate than people’s incomes here in South
Carolina, I’d ask you contact your Representative or
Senator. I’d particularly ask you to contact them about
repaying trust and reserve funds. These funds are there
to help us in rainy days and there are plenty of storm
clouds currently on the horizon. Gas has never been
above $2.00 a gallon in my life, interest rates are
rising and I don’t know what’s next for the economy. I
do know that on the coast, you get ready for a hurricane
before it starts raining, and in that same vein we’ve
been granted a golden opportunity to get our financial
affairs in better order. I hope we take it.
By Gov.
Mark Sanford
Posted 9:01am by BrettWitt