August 18, 2010

A Lesson From the Land of 10,000 Lakes and Cheeseheads

In the short run, government has three ways to react to a budget deficit: raise taxes, borrow money, or reduce expenditures. In the long run, the government has to increase taxes in order to pay back the loan plus interest, so government has only two ways to react: raise taxes or reduce expenditures.

According to a recent article in Governing, Minnesota and Wisconsin, my two home states, are choosing the second strategy. Their state governments are starting to share services as a means to cut expenditures. From the article (link via the Wall Street Journal’s Real Time Economics blog):

The Gopher and Badger states are looking to find efficiencies and save money on everything from sharing amusement ride inspectors to buying ammunition and tires. The task has not been easy, but in the year and a half since the report’s release, Minnesota and Wisconsin have shared resources, consolidated services, bartered and even joined forces on contracts for package delivery, software and institutional food.

The Show-Me State would be wise to follow the example of the Badger and Gopher states. Missouri borders eight states, so certainly there exist many opportunities to consolidate services in the style of Minnesota and Wisconsin. Raising additional tax revenue may be a simpler strategy to implement, but it doesn’t result in the same long-term savings and efficiency gains as sharing programs across state borders.

A project of the

 


Download the Show-Me Institute's iphone app. Download the Show-Me Institute's android app. Sign up for the Show-Me Institute's RSS feed
Follow the Show-Me Institute on Facebook Follow the Show-Me Institute on Twitter Watch the Show-Me Institute on YouTube

The views expressed by each contributor to this blog are those of that contributor alone, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Show-Me Institute.

Welcome to the official blog of the Show-Me Institute. Here you'll find daily commentary by Show-Me Institute staff and scholars.



Recent Posts

View a random entry.

Archives

Categories

Links

Missouri

Free Market

Sister Organizations

Powered by Wordpress