Friday, August 03, 2007

Of Bridges, Minnesota, Budgets and Transportation

OK, real short here, because this isn't complicated.

As some of you know I've lived in Minnesota for the past 14 years and am an economist here. I am very familiar with the bridge because I used to drive on that bridge daily and could see it from two of my living quarters whilst going to college. And I'm just as familiar with the state budget and finances here in Minnesota as well.

So I find it my duty to point out that when the inevitable call from the left comes to raise taxes to pay for crumbling bridges and infrastructure, (when we yet to know the cause of this particular collapse), that it is not a taxation problem, it's a spending problem.

And unlike everybody else out there, I'm going to prove it.

First is the Minnesota state budget. The vast majority of our money goes to two things;

Education and health and human services.

Only 7% goes to transportation.

This may cause those on the left to point and say, "See, SEE!!! We barely spend anything on transportation! We need to raise taxes!"

Well hold on there little buckaroos. The question is what would our overall tax rate in Minnesota be in the first place? Are we taxing enough? As it turns out we're already the 6th highest taxed state in the nation (and by some measures we're 3rd);


Also the state of Minnesota takes 7% of GSP (Gross State Product, my apologies for the age of the chart).


So it's pretty hard to argue that we don't tax enough. Matter of fact, we probably tax too much. And therefore it isn't a taxation problem, as much as it is a spending problem.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey Cap, glad you're alright. In addition to over-taxation, the media and people are so prone to start screaming for the Federal government to help now that the Feds just rushed in to help on this one so fast it seemed like it was just to save face IMO.

If the State government can't handle a bridge collapsing, we've got a problem considering this stuff is supposed to be for the State government to handle and not the Feds.

Anonymous said...

completely unrelated but did you hear about this?

http://www.thelocal.se/8089/20070803/

Anonymous said...

Healthcare. America has an overpopulation of medical specialists. Medical specialists make 2 to 3 times more than primary care doctors. If you want less of something, what do you do ? I knew that you knew.

Education. At one point we were first in distance education, now I believe we are still 49th. Do you suppose the reduction of labor costs put on the brakes ? Job programs are so last century, no business does more with less automation and more people these days.

Welfare. Most don't save, can't help you with elder welfare, sorry.

Transportation. The types of transit that can be automated are subway and monorail. These are the future for the subsidy of transit with a small labor force. See link.
http://mic-ro.com/metro/metrolist.html

Cathy said...

What are all those smaller items in the pie chart? Their labels don't imply what services they give. (at least I can't figure it out).