Political News and Commentary with the Right Perspective. NAVIGATION
  • Front Page
  • News
  • Multimedia
  • Tags
  • RSS Feed


  • Advertise on RightMichigan.com


    NEWS TIPS!

    Get the RightMighigan.com toolbar!


    RightMichigan.com

    Buzz

    Who are the NERD fund donors Mr Snyder?

    Raise the curtain.

    Dear Tax Raisers: Please Tell Us Where to Cut


    By THE MC Mackinac Center Blog, Section News
    Posted on Tue Nov 17, 2009 at 09:16:37 AM EST
    Tags: taxes (all tags)

    By Michael LaFaive, Mackinac Center fiscal policy analyst

    (Cross-posted from the MC, the Mackinac Center blog.)

    Although the fiscal 2010 Michigan budget requires no new taxes, Gov. Jennifer Granholm nevertheless has been trying to gin up support for a $600 million tax hike. This would be on top of the $1.4 billion tax hike she orchestrated in 2007, and would break a promise she made soon after that episode to never raise taxes again.

    If Michigan's governor and Legislature insist on taking more from families to solve the state's self-created overspending crisis, they should at least tell those families where to trim their budgets. To help, the graphic below shows the median budget of your prototypical Midwestern individual or family, according to the federal government.


    So help us, Madame Governor and legislators. Where exactly should we diminish our own lifestyles to accommodate your needs? Should we cut back on health care for the kids? Consume less food or clothing? Remove ourselves to meaner habitations? Eat out less? Take in fewer of the Hollywood films we're helping to bankroll?

    No doubt tax hike proponents will point to the need for tax revenues to pay for core government functions like police and fire protection, yet the Mackinac Center and others have identified countless examples of how to provide services at a lower cost. To cite just one, is it really necessary for state and local governments here to provide their employees with fringe benefits whose value exceeds private-sector averages by some $5.7 billion annually?

    Beyond following private-sector examples of providing more for less, before reaching deeper into taxpayer pockets, state and local government should eliminate all nonessential spending, such as for golf courses and state conference centers.

    The politicians' itch to reach deeper into people's pockets to prop up the state's unsustainable bureaucratic machine is unnecessary and unfair to the millions of taxpayers here who struggle daily to keep their own budgets in balance.

    < Indecision 09 | In the MACKINAC CENTER Sphere Today >


    Share This: Digg! StumbleUpon del.icio.us reddit reddit


    Display: Sort:
    I love these articles. Please send more! (none / 0) (#1)
    by maidintheus on Thu Nov 19, 2009 at 08:21:29 AM EST
    But I'm not askin' GranHack for nothin'!

    I would like to suggest to my fellow citizens that they find areas themselves to change how they're dealing with their finances, where they still have the freedom to do so. I know those areas are ever more restricted. Yet, there is a glaring one.

    If we look at the almost $3,000 spent on entertainment we could spend some of that on a different product, if not in a different area. I'd suggest finding a 'rainy day savings' area. Regardless, leaving the funds in entertainment, a lot of this money is spent on games, cd's, movies...which goes directly to the celebrities et al, who are already filthy rich. They're paid to give us a piece of their mind when we should pay ourselves for our own peace of mind.

    If one can't put the money towards an out of town vacation or an in town hotel get away, I'd suggest an area that would provide anytime entertainment as well as a benefit for all. The $ could be spent on card games, board games, word games, simple meals to share with friends invited for said entertainment. This would be good for family/social/education...and many other areas.

    Display: Sort:

    Login

    Make a new account

    Username:
    Password:
    Tweet along with RightMichigan by
    following us on Twitter HERE!
    create account | faq | search