Social Networks We Use

Facebook Twitter

CT Tech Junkie Feed

Connecticut E-Book Customers to Receive More Rebates
May 23, 2013 8:26 am
Attorney General George Jepsen announced that e-book publisher Penguin has agreed to a price fixing settlement that...more »
3rd Annual Connecticut-Israel Technology Summit Set for June 12
May 17, 2013 3:03 pm
The MetroHartford Alliance and the Jewish Federation of Greater Hartford have announced the third annual...more »
CTNext Launches Startup Map
May 5, 2013 12:29 pm
CTNext, a public/private partnership helping the high tech startup community in the state, launched an interactive map...more »

Tag List

Report: No Spending Problem Here

by Hugh McQuaid | Feb 4, 2011 12:32pm
(9) Comments | Commenting has expired
Posted to: State Budget

Auto-login on future visits

Forgot your password?

Google

The causes of Connecticut’s current financial woes had less to do with bloated government and overspending and more to do with a lagging economy and poor fiscal choices, according to a new report released by the Connecticut Voices for Children.

The report found that, relative to the size of its economy, Connecticut has the fifth smallest state and local government in the country.  The size of the public sector as a percentage of its total economy hasn’t actually grown in over 40 years, it said.

As a percentage of its gross state product (GSP), Connecticut’s government equaled about 7.8 percent of its economy in 2008. In relative terms, that makes the state’s government smaller than states like Texas and New Hampshire, which are generally known for lean government.

The report, called “Reality Check: Connecticut’s Public Revenues and Spending Have Remained Lean and Stable for Decades,” was assembled by the research-based think tank mostly using data from the census and economic analysis bureaus.  In the interest of preserving social programs, the report cautions against using budget cuts as the primary way to close the state’s budget deficits.

“We need to be clear-eyed about our real economic and state budget problems,” said Joachim Hero, the research analyst who wrote the report.  “Given that Connecticut’s state and local government is already relatively lean, relying too heavily on budget cuts to close the deficit would damage basic services, such as education, health care, transportation, and public safety.”

Instead, the group recommends some revenue reform measures it says could close the budget gap without sacrificing services.

Adopting a more progressive income tax structure could help the state address the budget deficit, the report said.

As a percentage of their total income, the richest one percent of Connecticut residents paid about half as much as their worse-off neighbors, it said. The top earners paid about 4.9 percent of their income in state and local taxes while middleclass residents paid about 10 percent and low-income residents paid about 12 percent, the report said.

“Through tax reform, Connecticut could increase revenue while at the same time lowering taxes for many of its residents,” the report read.

It compared the state’s tax structure to New Jersey, which has larger total share of income paid to government but has a lower tax rate for most of its residents.

But the report argued against the common assertion that Connecticut residents are taxed more than residents of other states. 

The percentage residents’ total income paid towards state and local governments has actually dropped in the state over a period where it rose nationally. In 1997, an average of 14.7 percent of residents’ income went towards the state’s governments. That number dropped to 13.9 percent in 2008, the report said.

During that same period, the national average rose from 15.6 percent to 15.9 percent, it said.

As policy makers are looking to find places to cut spending, the report notes that Connecticut’s spending on programs like education, social services, transportation, public safety, environment and housing already ranks in the bottom 10 percent for the country.

“Connecticut does not have a spending problem, it has a recession problem, and an overreliance on cuts to address the recession-induced budget deficit could worsen both our economic and fiscal outlooks,” the report concludes.

The report also recommended regionalizing municipal services, closing corporate tax loopholes and cutting down on the state’s $5.3 billion in tax expenditures as alternatives to budget cuts.

Republican lawmakers who have been demanding spending cuts for years are unlikely to agree with the findings of the report and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy has already said he’s going to cut $1.88 billion from the current services budget to maintain spending levels in fiscal year 2012 at the same levels as 2011. The rest of the $3.67 billion deficit will be made up with changes to the state’s tax structure, Malloy has hinted. Malloy will unveil his first budget proposal on Feb. 16.

Joseph Brennan, senior vice president of the Connecticut Business and Industry Association, said the group was using the wrong tools to measure the size of the state’s government. Rather than comparing personal income to gross state product, Brennan recommended comparing income to the consumer price index. The state should focus on making government more efficient and growing its economy rather than taxing people more and slowing the economy so it can support people using state services, he said.

Tags: , , ,

Share this story with others.

Share |

(9) Comments

posted by: AntonK | February 4, 2011  1:01pm

“Connecticut Voices for Children.” Right, no agenda there. If CVT is not a front for a leftist-Progressive outfit, I’ll crawl across broken glass for a hundred miles.

posted by: ... | February 4, 2011  1:39pm

...

What the group fails to recognize is that many of the proposed cuts or reductions in our debt from the legislature are freezes in raises and adjustment, as well as outright cuts to the salaries of our elected officials.

It is not an issue of whether the number of public workers has truly grown in relation to our population size. It is a matter of how big the paycheck and how many benefits public workers get from the tax payers has grown in the past decade or so.

I am sure most people in the state do not want to fire their neighbors, but we are all have to work harder in the same hours for less, and so should our public sector.

posted by: bgenerous | February 4, 2011  2:06pm

With a maximum 5% CT income tax rate (2008) which has since changed to 6.5% on high income earners, 4.9% is too low as the total of all state and local taxes as a percent of income paid by high income earners as there are few significant state income tax deductions for high earners.  The study is reducing state taxes by certain federal income tax deductions and is not truly representing state and local taxes.

How would CT compare to other states if all states and local governments had fully funded their pension and retiree medical obligations?

posted by: hawkeye | February 4, 2011  3:54pm

Let’s wait till Feb. 16, when we can read the Gov. Malloy first budget proposal.

posted by: Lawrence | February 4, 2011  7:41pm

Finally, a little sanity compared to usual waterfall of CBIA BS.

posted by: StateRep | February 5, 2011  12:37pm

This group has an expertise in budgets and statistics?

Maybe they should spend less on proving their worth and figure out ways to improve education, jobs and prosperity for families.

If they did that then would be in conflict with their funders - the speaker and his working family friends.

Just another special interest!

posted by: nyambol | February 6, 2011  9:23am

Of all the comments contesting the report, only _one_ actually contests it on the basis of its contents.  The rest are ad hominem attacks on the report writers.  These critics can be dismissed out of hand, as their political opinions are not based on empirical observation but on prejudice.  No amount of facts will change their minds about anything.

People who _are_ living in the reality-based universe should consider what this report means for the economic life of the state and put the results of that thought into action at the voting booth and in their relations with their elected representatives. 

The fact that cash-rich companies refuse to hire additional employees, and instead overwork the existing staff while giving handsome bonuses, pay rises and benefits to management, is not a justification for shortchanging public sector workers—i.e., teachers, police officers, firemen, corrections officers: who make up the bulk of the public paycheck.

posted by: City Hall Watch | February 6, 2011  4:39pm

Why is it a legit news story every time CT Voices issues one of their biased lopsided and poorly sourced reports? Worthless in terms of knowledge and discussion. With little to no opposing view, why not just publish it as a paid advertisement. At least CBIA pays for their messaging without pretending to be legit news. Readers deserve better.

posted by: hawkeye | February 6, 2011  5:49pm

AntonK:  I have to give you a lot of credit, as you neer fail to “mince your words!”