Published
5 years agoon
Gov. Gavin Newsom is tiptoeing into a political region that predecessor Jerry Brown purposely skirted — expanding expensive services and benefits that are difficult, and perhaps impossible, to shrink if California’s economy turns sour.
They are called “entitlements” and Newsom’s own proclivities and pressure from a very liberal Legislature are slowly, but surely, expanding existing ones and adding new ones.
The state’s economy has continued to hum and Newsom is much more receptive to spending its bounty on entitlements.
“It’s often said that budgets are statements of values,” Newsom said in his budget letter to the Legislature. “In America’s most populous and productive state, our state budget is more than that. It is a blueprint for a better quality of life and brighter future for millions of individuals striving and succeeding together — in pursuit of their own version of the California Dream.”
Newsom’s budget projects that the good times will continue not only during the upcoming fiscal year but through the “forecast period” — basically the remaining three years of his first term.
But will they?
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A day before the budget was unveiled, the Legislature’s budget analyst issued an updated “state fiscal health index” that raised some warning flags.
“Data provides a mixed message about the condition of the state’s economy,” the bulletin said. “Some signs point to a weakening economy, while others continue to signal growth. Overall, while not imminent, the risk of a slowdown in the coming year appears higher than it has been for some time.”
As if to underscore that warning, as Newsom was describing his new budget to reporters at the Capitol, the federal Bureau of Economic Analysis issued a report showing that California’s economic growth through the third quarter of 2019 was less than half of 2018’s 4.3%.
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