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Guest column: Targeted budget cuts better choice for South Carolina
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My dad always taught me that if you’re going to offer “constructive criticism,” try and say something nice up front — and in that vein I want to compliment the General Assembly for their work this year on number of fronts. Small business healthcare reform, DUI reform, and immigration reform all represent steps to improved quality of life in South Carolina, and I genuinely appreciate the work that went into making these sometimes contentiously debated things happen.
But I don’t think the paragraph above will change the dynamics in the current disagreement with some legislative leaders on whether or not we should allow across-the-board budget cuts in our state government to stand.
State government spending has grown more than 40 percent over the last four years, well ahead of the growth in South Carolina’s underlying economy and well ahead of the growth of people’s paychecks over the same time. Our disagreements on this level of spending and our warnings on that front have all been well chronicled over the last five years and to a great degree represent water under the bridge.
This doesn’t change the fact that spending growth has set us up to repeat the budget situation of the early 2000s, when during three years’ time there were six rounds of budget cuts. In every instance cuts were across the board because our political system has been designed to take the path of least resistance, not the one that leads to the best of decisions whether in our personal or business lives.
In our family budgets we differentiate between what we commit to the mortgage and what we commit to buying tickets to the movies. With $3.50/gallon gas there are thousands of families across South Carolina making tough choices on where they spend their money. No one says, “We’ll just cut everything across the board by 3 percent,” because they know the mortgage is in a very different category than movies and popcorn. Businesses across our state set priorities. Why shouldn’t your state government?
The only way to begin to change this dynamic so that our political system is more reticent about overspending is indeed to have members dealing with budget issues both when the tide rises and falls. This is particularly the case given the fact that we have $27 billion in unfunded political promises that go well beyond the budget shortfalls of this year.
Finally, this is something that could be dealt with quickly by the legislature. I’ve seen firsthand how in a few hours’ time tens of millions of dollars in vetoes that we’ve offered could be dispensed with. If we wait on this until January it means there will be a de facto 1.5 percent across-the-board cut to all agencies. This doesn’t make any sense when some agencies like Corrections or Education are already running deficits. The Competitive Grants program is scheduled to spend $100,000 this fall to give German politicians a beach holiday at Myrtle Beach at the same time the Department of Education is running shortfalls on fuel for school buses.
I won’t belabor the point further but I think targeted cuts now rather than later are vital to the priority-setting process essential in best using taxpayers dollars. There are many fine members of the legislative body who agree with this but the course that their leadership has embarked on is to the contrary. Only you can break this tie and accordingly I’d ask you make your voice heard.
Republican Mark Sanford is in his second term as governor of South Carolina.
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