by Alexander Mallin
(MDN News) -- Republicans in the state Capitol said Thursday that they want to change
the Missouri Constitution to cap state spending and possibly lower the
state income tax. Sen. Brad Lager, R-Savannah, told the Senate Ways and Means Committee
that he wants voters to put a spending limit on the General Assembly.
It would prevent the government from exceeding the budget of the
previous fiscal year, with an adjustment for inflation. Lager said its wrong for the legislature to encourage economic growth through tax cuts without addressing state spending. "All too often in this building the philosophy of 'starve the beast'
happens," Lager said. "If you don't limit spending all you're going to
see is bigger problems down the road." Lager said his proposal would ideally lead to Missouri eliminating
the income tax, which he said would put it in better contention with its
neighboring states.
"If we do not have the tools in place to at least be competitive at
some point, we are going to lose economically," Lager said. "You can't
just focus on the revenue side and think that we're going to make this
journey. You also have to have a real and candid discussion about the
cost side."
But Sen. Paul LeVota, D-Independence, said changing the state Constitution would be too drastic of a step.
"To me the scary part of this is tying the hands of
future legislatures to not be able to do what they may need to do,"
LeVota said.
Jay Hardenbrook, Policy Director of the
liberal-leaning Missouri Budget Project, said the proposed amendment
could endanger certain state programs by cutting too much too fast. "We do have to address the spending side at the same time we're
addressing the revenue side," Hardenbrook said. "But we need to do that
with a scalpel and not a machete and we tend to think of this as more of
a machete approach." Hardenbrook said if this measure had passed last
year, the state would have had to cut an additional $87 million from the
budget in order to follow it.
Lager said that after working 11 years in the
Missouri capitol, he has run out of ideas to keep government
expansion under control. "I don't have faith in elected officials," Lager
said. "I have now painfully watched as both sides have grown the budget
exponentially. I don't believe that's ever going to change. The only way
we are going to slow the growth of government is when the people tell
those who are elected, 'You can no longer do this'." The amendment is still being heard in committee; if passed through the General Assembly voters would decide on it in 2014.
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