Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Impossible - Growth without Investing in Us
I’ve
been less than subtle over the years that the United States is living off the
investments from past generations. The hydroelectric revolution of FDR’s New
Deal, the GI Bill that sent millions of post-WWII veterans to college, the
federal Interstate Highway system under President Dwight Eisenhower, the
engineering generated by NASA during the Kennedy/Johnson years, etc.
Carter
wasn’t around long enough to make a difference. Reagan was about cutting
federal expenses, and Clinton was all about cutting the deficit with a budget
surplus. George W Bush began cutting taxes and fighting two wars in the Middle
East/Central Asia, running the deficit and triggering the worst economic
downturn since the Great Depression, while Obama was spending money to recover
from that recession, still fighting those wars. And then there’s Donald Trump
who massively cut taxes for the rich while not spending as pledged on
infrastructure and cutting back on federal support for research and education.
Meanwhile,
China and lots of European countries have prioritized government support of
research, infrastructure and, most of all, education. They’ve thrown massive
billions to improve primary and secondary education and blasted forward in
post-high education with a heavy STEM (science, technology, engineering and
math) emphasis and free or near-free tuition. Nations that have invested in
education see startling results within a decade or two. Economic growth
accelerates when the workforce kicks up its skills and learning.
In
terms of primary and secondary schools, most countries have one massive school
district, or sometimes there are large regional districts (for huge cities, for
example), The United States has around 13 thousand school districts. Waste
personified. Education curricula are often based on local beliefs not economic
priorities.
Otherwise,
stagnation defines those who sit with hope that the economy will resurrect
their now-obsolete skills… as Donald Trump has promised workers in the Rust
Belt and in Coal Country. 70% of this nation’s workforce, those able to hold on
to their jobs, haven’t seen an increase in inflation-corrected earning power in
four decades. As you look at those rosy unemployment numbers, remember that
those who have been displaced and are no longer looking for work are not
included in those statistics. That wages have increased for the most skilled
incredibly pulls up averages where once-skilled blue collar workers who work at
all are now working part-time, in the gig economy, or have taken relatively
lower paying work.
Over
the last decade, on the other hand, the post-card anti-Trump resistant state,
California, has risen from being the
sixth largest economy on earth (if California were a country) to fifth. In the
mid-term elections, no Republican won any statewide offices, the legendary GOP
stronghold Orange County flipped blue, and the state legislature was voted into
a veto-proof Democratic super-majority. California is exceptionally proud of
its University of California system but is ashamed at its overall public school
system.
California,
which is taxed more under Trump’s “tax cut” because of the very limited
deductibility of state taxes, is liberal… and hence very, very pro-education,
research and infrastructure. But although we pay more income and property taxes
than most states, Californians truly understand that they do not grow and prosper
without serious upgrades to their entire educational system. They believe that
prioritizing quality, increasing access to state residents (versus selling
expensive spots to foreign students who do not get residential discounts) and
decreasing costs for students are vital for the state’s future… and are ready
to increase taxes further to pay for that growth. Fixing the state’s
educational system was a basic plank in Governor-elect Gavin Newsom’s platform.
“Most Californians believe higher education should be
a top priority for the new governor and support increased funding for public
colleges and universities, according to a new survey by the Public Policy
Institute of California.
“As the state’s public higher education system
struggles to recover from major funding cuts a decade ago, the majority of
Californians surveyed by the institute supported giving the schools a wide
range of help. Most backed free community college, a statewide bond measure for
university construction projects, a minimum state funding guarantee and even
reform of Proposition 13 to raise more money by loosening restrictions on
taxing commercial properties…
“Democrats and independents were far more likely to
favor more generous funding. More than three-fourths of Democrats surveyed said
they would support a state bond measure and Proposition 13 reforms to raise
more money for colleges and universities, compared with just over a quarter of
Republicans.
“Although two-thirds of Democrats and independents
want to tie increased funding to student outcomes, such as graduation rates,
only 44% of Republicans were in favor. Republicans also were less likely to
believe that college was necessary for career success.
“The biggest problem facing college students today,
most of those surveyed said — above educational quality and admissions access —
is the cost.
“Most were concerned that students were taking on too
much debt, and more than one-third of those surveyed said housing and living
expenses were a greater financial burden than tuition. (Financial aid covers
tuition for the majority of students at the University of California and
California State University.)
“The findings are based on a survey of 1,703
California adults, conducted in English and Spanish from Oct. 27 to Nov. 5. The
margin of error is 3.5 percentage points.”
“The UC and Cal State systems both are requesting more
state funding for 2019-20 to avoid tuition hikes and expand enrollment, provide
more student support, pay for faculty and staff raises and repair aging
buildings. Despite recent funding increases, the state’s share of per-student
support at UC has dropped from 78% in 1990 to 37% in 2017.” Los Angeles Times,
November 19th.
Think the entire United States might be wise to stop
wasting money on tax cuts for those who do not need it and instead invest in
our future? Given the failure of new investments from that tax cut, the stock
buy-backs and dividends that do nothing to improve our economy, it’s time for
us to reverse that wrong-headed waste.
I’m Peter Dekom,
and if we belief in America, the least we can do is to get government to invest
in its future.
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