Contact: Marsha Richards, Communications
Director
(360) 956-3482
Let the economy breathe
By Bob Williams & Carl Gipson Washington state has lost 96,300 jobs since December 2000 -- more
than any other state in the nation. This includes the loss of 45,700 high-paid
manufacturing jobs . . . and the state forecasts the loss of 20,000 more
by the end of the year.
By comparison, California, with an economy five times the size of ours,
has lost 83,800 jobs.
So whats going on? Governor Gary Locke says these job losses are
the fault of the federal government, the national recession, and the terrorist
threats. But hes wrong. The problem starts right here at home with
our states anti-business policies.
Washington has one of the highest business tax burdens in the nation, and
already this year businesses have been hit with one of their largest tax
increases in history: unemployment insurance rates went up 15.6 percent
and workers compensation rates increased an average of 29 percent.
Workers compensation rates are expected to go still higher later this
year.
On top of high taxes, overzealous agency regulators are smothering businesses.
Liability insurance has increased tenfold for many, and the minimum wage
has increased to a level exceeding that of 47 other states. Because of excessive
insurance mandates, health care insurance premiums have skyrocketed. And
implementation of the controversial new ergonomics regulations is expected
to cost businesses (and through them, their employees and consumers) as
much as $750 million.
Ironically, Governor Locke recently boasted that five companies had decided
to open new facilities or expand in Washington state thanks to improvements
in the business climate. What he failed to mention is that he granted all
of these companies an exemption to the new ergonomics regulations!
The governors proposed economic recovery and jobs creation program
is off-target, to say the least. He recently traveled around the state hosting
press conferences to announce his plans to borrow more money (which our
children will have to pay off) to build more state facilities (which taxpayers
will have to operate and maintain) to create more state jobs (which taxpayers
will have to support).
Locke wants to max out the states credit limit by borrowing $900
million in general obligation bonds. Then he wants to go beyond the limit
and borrow $300 million against future lottery proceeds (which are forecasted
to drop dramatically) and another $90 million against efficiency savings
that have not yet been identified.
This is a perfect example of how not to solve an economic problem. As jobs
leave the state and working families are being forced to bear a heavier
share of governments total spending, increasing the tax burden is
exactly the wrong thing to do. Our state doesnt need more employees
on the public payroll, it needs more family-wage jobs in the private sector.
And the private sector is ready to provide them. Businesses dont
want government to give them a handout, they want government to get out
of the way. They want state officials to remove the barriers making Washington
a bad place to do business. Almost every day during this legislative session,
business groups have been in Olympia pleading with legislators to rein in
the states out-of-control bureaucracy.
Our state has an abundance of natural resources and a skilled and entrepreneurial
population. These are the key elements for a thriving, healthy, competitive
economy. But they are being suffocated by our states bloated bureaucracy.
Washington is at a crossroads. We will continue to lose more family-wage
jobs and skilled workers until Governor Locke and his colleagues in the
legislature take real action to address real problems. Rather than trying
to find short-term, feel-good fixes, they need to look after the long-term
health of the economy. They should carefully consider how they can implement
regulatory reform, streamline permitting processes, lower taxes, clear traffic
congestion, and repeal punitive labor laws.
The question is, will they?
Bob Williams is president of the Olympia-based Evergreen Freedom Foundation,
and Carl Gipson is the Foundations Deputy Communications Director.
At a March 23, 2005, House Appropriations hearing on a bill to gut the voter-approved I-601 spending limit, Rep. Jim McIntire (D) asked a supporter of I-601’s two-third supermajority requirement for the legislature to raise taxes the following question:
"Can you name a time when we [legislators] have actually not just set it [supermajority requirement] aside by majority vote? I mean, this is in many respects a procedural motion that has no bearing. It’s a statutory constraint that cannot constrain any legislature that chooses as a majority to set it aside . . . have we ever used a supermajority [to raise taxes]?"