Local Business
PATRICK BARKEY: A bounce back in our spending appetites
If you ever want to satisfy your curiosity about recessions and business cycles, travel over to the Web site of the National Bureau of Economic Research. They’ve recorded and documented every downturn and uptick in the U.S. economy since 1857. And over that century and a half, they’ve noticed certain regularities to the boom and bust of the economy around us.
In the first stages of recovery from a recession, for example, it is quite common for the economy to experience above-average growth, as confidence returns and businesses and consumers begin to open their wallets and buy the things they’ve done without during the tougher times.
There’s a regularity in public sector finances as well, but it’s a little different. Recessions hit governments at all levels with a fiscal double whammy. Just as tax revenues dip because of the slumping economy, expenses shoot upwards to pay for the heavier load on the social safety net taxes help pay for. The deficits that result are a little like a hangover after a wild party — lingering long after the noise has stopped and the recession is over.
The Indiana state treasury has only recently managed to close the books on a painful recession that officially ended in 2001, but whose fiscal impacts lasted much longer. The state budget is balanced, the state’s credit rating is up, and projections for the upcoming fiscal year show a modest surplus. But those projections don’t take into account another regularity of how business cycles affect the public sector. That’s the bounce back in demand for public spending on projects and initiatives of all kinds.
Many of those spending proposals have been on hold for several years running, as budget realities in state government kept them tucked inside lobbyists’ pockets and out of public view. But with the first news of rising revenue, that’s changing in a hurry. And as recently summarized in a briefing by Mark Brown of the Indiana Fiscal Policy Institute, the list of projects and needs in search of new state dollars is a daunting one.
It’s hard to say no to many of these. Making good on skipped payments to schools and universities, unfreezing wages and hiring, or even restoring some of the legally dubious cuts made in Medicaid spending would be in that category, at least to my thinking. Other proposals, such as instituting universal full day kindergarten in public schools, have been supported in principle by our leaders for so long that overlooking them now would put their credibility at risk.
But after lying low for so long, the ambitions of many for public spending go a lot farther than that. Just one plan, from one public university — Indiana University — calls for $80 million in new money in 2007 to support a life sciences initiative that would ultimately hire almost 500 new researchers. A vision of state-mandated universal health insurance, as adopted in Massachusetts and under consideration in California, could easily cost several hundred million. And every proposal out there to limit the growth in the bite of the property tax adds to state spending on property tax relief to localities, now the second largest category for state spending from the general fund.
These plans give our elected leaders a chance to do what they love to do — to reach out to the electorate and pick winners. Will homeowners get property tax relief? Or will poor families get more generous Medicaid coverage? Or will we finally give judges and other state officials a decent pay increase? It’s a happy legislator who can march home to his or her district with presents to give out.
But there’s one more regularity in business cycles and public sector finances we should all keep in mind. That is the inevitability of the next downturn. No matter how many hungry mouths cry for money and attention, setting enough aside today to meet that challenge has to be a higher priority.
- Local Business
-
-
Million Meals program aims to feed the hungry in a land of plenty
David Hardin’s family-owned hog farm had survived nearly two years of economic downturn.
A plunging pork market had led to a $20 loss on every pig sold, when a colleague came to him with a request last summer: Would he and his fellow pork producers in the state provide a million meals to feed hungry people in Indiana? -
Labor Day without the labor
Joyce Qualls said she’s blessed. She has something that 11.7 percent of working-age county residents don’t have — a job.
-
Osteen preaches positive outlook for Anderson
For a little over a year I have been hosting a radio show on WHBU 1240-AM that I intended to use as a vehicle to simply share a vision for success. The goal is to interview local and national business owners about their success stories.
-
Stimulus pumps nearly $5 million into neighborhoods
ANDERSON — To see how stimulus dollars are changing neighborhoods in Anderson, drive down Sheridan Street, and the vicinity near Allen Chapel AME Church and Sherman Street Church of God north of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.
-
Council to pass final budget, salary ordinances
ANDERSON — Anderson City Council on Thursday will introduce a preliminary 2011 budget for city departments, while some city departments will ask to shift money within their accounts to pay salaries for the rest of the year.
-
Economic Development groups working together
ANDERSON — The groups may have different titles but each has the same mission — economic growth for the area.
-
Big Joe Clark: Needed: Sponsor for good news, and certainty
Few will forget one of the most genius marketing lines ever: “Where’s the beef?” Short, sweet and brilliant.
-
THB Business Profile: Newsom Locksmith
Newsom Locksmith is able to service all kinds of locks — home, business and vehicle.
-
Stimulus funds to rehab 6 vacant houses
Six homes built less than 15 years ago that have sat vacant for years will be renovated after the Anderson Board of Public Works on Tuesday approved bids totaling more than $362,000 for rehabilitation of the houses in or around the 1300 block of West 10th Street.
-
Anderson Costume to close after 33 years
The row of trophies declaring championships dating as far back as 1981 are visible from the outside of Anderson Costume, shining through the dusty shop window.
- More Local Business Headlines
-
Million Meals program aims to feed the hungry in a land of plenty





