Hey Big Daddy,
I just finished reading the entire report from the
Commission on the 21st Century Economy, and I’m pumped. Could we really be on the verge of eliminating
the corporations tax, flattening the income tax and
replacing it with a net receipts tax?
–Optimistic in Orange
I do admire your optimism. It has a certain quaintness,
a certain charm. And I admire the fact that you actually
read and know what’s in the proposal, really I do.
The point is, however, that you’re missing the point. I see that the governor’s office decided to ignore all the bad press on the
commission’s release this week, and instead opted to send around
a batch of quotes from everyone from George Schultz
and Dianne Feinstein to Willie Brown. And if you read
the quotes carefully, none of them actually endorsed
a single word of the commission’s report.
No, they all admired the hard work the commission did,
and agreed that our tax system is broken, but nobody
came out and said, “This is the blueprint for our tax future.”
Maybe that’s because it isn’t.
It seems fitting, given the fact that the governor
chose to quote Willie Brown this week, that I do the
same. Once upon a time, there was an Assemblyman from
Poway named Jan Goldsmith. Jan was a heck of a nice
guy and owner of one of Sacramento’s worst toupees. And that’s saying something.
Well, some time in the early 1990s, Willie was still speaker and Goldsmith was carrying
a bill that had gotten a lot of press around the state
that would have legalized ferrets as pets. Willie didn’t like the bill, and made his disdain for the measure
clear. When asked about the prospects of Goldsmith’s bill to pass the Assembly, Willie quipped, “That bill’s as dead as the thing on his head.”
I’ve gotta imagine this report has about the same prospects,
in purely Goldsmithian terms. Even the governor has
backed away from wanting the recommendations to be
voted on en masse in the Legislature.
Sure, everybody said nice things, or not too mean of
things, when the report was released, but nobody thinks
this is the answer to our prayers. The problem with
this report, and the dozens of reports like it that
litter our state archives, is that they don’t take politics into account. The reason our state
tax system is so broken is not because we don’t have lots of ideas about how to make it better. It’s because we don’t have the political will to fix it.
Folks on the right and the left have carved out their
respective pieces, and unless the solution makes their
pieces bigger, the political prognosis is grim. The
anti-tax groups don’t want anything that will increase taxes on anybody.
Liberals don’t want to do anything that would diminish existing
state revenues, even though they’re as unstable as Kanye West at an awards show.
So, Optimistic, keep that chin up, and keep on reading
those reports. And maybe someday, somebody will come
up with a way to actually clean up some of the political
mess that we all see around us, and remain powerless
to change.


