Jan 25, 2009

Jeff Nolan's California Government Spending Table

Jeff Nolan at Venture Chronicles lays out the difference between California state revenues and spending clearly over at his blog.  
He is discussing why people will attack Prop. 13 as an additional source of revenues, and I agree with him.  If they abolish Prop. 13, then it will make predicting the taxes for home ownership much less predictable.  The more potential variance in future expenses there is, the less people can plan and budget appropriately.  And eventually that will lead to less home ownership.  And as he points out California makes more revenue when the overall home ownership grows substantially, not when the taxes from each home owner grow.
But that's not the main point I got from the posting.  I noticed that California state expenditures grew almost 40% over a 4 year period from 2004-05 to 2008-09.  40%!  You would think it would be difficult to scale California's expenses 40% in four years.  It took 154 years for the spending to get to $100 Billion.  It only took another 4 years to add another $40 Billion.
That's a problem.  A big problem.

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