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Killing Local America
American Conservative Union Foundation ^ | April 23, 2008 | Donald Devine

Posted on 04/27/2008 5:51:12 PM PDT by K-oneTexas

Killing Local America
by Donald Devine
Issue 106 - April 23, 2008

So it is a conservative canard that government aid means government control?

Liberal New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine is out to prove the conservatives right. He recently announced in his state budget message that he would drastically cut or eliminate state aid to its 323 towns with populations of fewer than 10,000 if they did not consolidate themselves into larger, more “efficient” units. There is not much greater control than elimination.

Gov. Corzine won his reputation as a mergers and acquisitions chairman of the investment banking firm Goldman Sachs. He was into cutthroat capitalism and its engine of “creative destruction” and, after making his tens of millions in the investment field, he offered to take this same expertise into government, starting in the U.S. Senate. The old CEO became bored with legislation and left Congress to become top state executive. So in his first budget crunch he forced through an increased sales tax and in his second he demanded town consolidation. It’s just like Wall Street, right--the larger the unit the more efficient the organization—economy of scale, right? Wrong.

Corzine should listen to his own mayors. Mayor Edward Campbell of little Gibbsboro responded that the governor ignored the fact that small communities can escape the limitations of economy of scale by competitive bidding and contracting with private industry and by greater use of part time employees. Collingswood Mayor James Maley noted that many municipalities, including his town and nearby Woodlynne, already have cooperative agreements that cut costs. Somerdale Mayor Gary Passanante pointed out that of the New Jersey towns with the 50 lowest effective municipal tax rates, 48 have populations under 10,000. Moreover, while big cities are declining in population, people are flocking to smaller communities. Rousseau actually declared that 10,000 was the ideal sized community.

The Governor’s imperialistic attitude is noteworthy but even on the merits, where has this guy been—larger governments are more efficient? As early as the 1970s, the private sector learned that there was a limit to economies of scale and began breaking down and flattening large bureaucracies that could not compete efficiently. The last holdout was finance but even Corzine’s own field followed early in the new century. The Federal Government had actually debunked the idea of economies of scale for governments as early as the 1980s. The U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations determined that contracting out to the private sector or other governments allowed the smallest local government to be as, or more likely, more efficient than larger local governments—since the later were typically dominated by public sector unions devoted to security rather than efficiency.

Where Corzine has been as governor, senator and investment-banker has been encased in the museum piece called modern “progressivism”—which is a corruption of both socialism and capitalism, not simply a moderate socialism as many on the right mistakenly believe. It combines the socialist value of equality with the capitalist means of economy of scale supposedly to create both capitalism with a heart and an efficient socialism. Unfortunately for the progressives, economy of scale was only one means used to create capitalist efficiency and not necessarily the most important, which is determined by what works best in a market setting, which neither socialism’s elimination of private property nor progressivism’s rule by the experts’ plan allows. As a result, progressivism was not only more inefficient than capitalism because its plan was too inflexible to control the market’s great complexity but even of socialism, which could use blunt force to break through the complexity, at least in the short run.

For many years after the market abandoned it as its talisman, economy of scale has been the dominant theorem of public administration. The virtual inventor of expert public administration in the U.S.--Woodrow Wilson—basically wrote the book on the subject as the dominant public intellectual of the early 20th Century, and then institutionalized them as governor of Corzine’s own state—what is in the water there?--and as president. But Wilson’s Federal Reserve did not prevent the Great Depression and may well have caused it.

Franklin Roosevelt made these ideas the center of his New Deal and they have been the dominant governing doctrine ever since. Yet, the Depression was not ended until World War II and his agencies could not prevent the ruinous stagflation of the 1970s—or today. As far as budgets, it is not small government that is threatening insolvency but Federal Medicare, Social Security and Federally-imposed Medicaid. As noted in its recent Trustees report Medicare, by far the largest, is already in the red and exhausts its trust funds as early as 2019 (and as John Goodman shows nearby, this is optimistic) and Medicaid is actually the greatest state financial drain.

Progressive ideology has not targeted local government for its expense but because it is too diverse and uncontrollable. Progressivism relies on “experts” to use concentrated government power to pursue the general welfare. Not only private markets but also what economists call the market of local governments diffuse power so the experts cannot control “problems.” Too much freedom gets in the way of the experts’ planning. So, public and private, diversity must be eliminated or controlled.

As recently as 1900, local government raised twice the revenue as the national government and six times as much as state governments. Then progressivism set out to eliminate small government diversity. From using the multi-service county rather than creating additional municipalities, to municipal consolidation reforms (creating one large city from scores of towns), to the encouragement of annexation of nearby unincorporated land, to simply making it difficult to create new municipalities, progressive reforms smothered new local governments. Today there are hardly more municipalities, townships and towns than there were at the turn of the last century, even with the incredible growth of population. For school districts, it is even worse. While there were 127, 000 independent school districts as late as the 1930s, now there are only 14,000.

But freedom has its own power. Local governments in the U.S. are still more powerful than in most of the rest of the world and most new settlement is in private local community associations. In New Jersey, Gov. Corzine’s threats may have actually the opposite effect. The small towns are revolting. William Dressel, the head of the state Municipal League, traces such opposition to colonial times, stressing that “people like that sense of community. They like their sense of home town. Bigger does not mean better.” Many are questioning the value of state aid if it can be cut so arbitrarily. The governor has made it obvious that state aid means state control. Most of the mayors claim they would rather give up the aid than lose their independence.

America became great as a nation of local government. When the great French social theorist Alexis de Tocqueville visited America in the early days of the republic, he reported that local and voluntary communities successfully solved their own problems and the national and state governments hardly existed locally. A rebirth of local independence is precisely what the U.S. needs today and Corzine’s abuse of government power may be just the shot needed to rouse its fervor for community.

Donald Devine, the editor of Conservative Battleline Online, was the director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management from 1981 to 1985 and is the director of the Federalist Leadership Center at Bellevue University.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: New Jersey
KEYWORDS: corzine; rural

1 posted on 04/27/2008 5:51:13 PM PDT by K-oneTexas
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To: K-oneTexas

Recall!


2 posted on 04/27/2008 5:54:14 PM PDT by DrGunsforHands
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To: K-oneTexas
if they did not consolidate themselves into larger, more “efficient” units

Borg: "you will be assimilated".

3 posted on 04/27/2008 5:54:25 PM PDT by MrPiper
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To: K-oneTexas

“State Aid” is a red herring. That money is reimbursement for taxes that are collected centrally, that USED to be collected by the local municipalities. In the name of efficiency through consolidation! Somewhere along the line it got renamed ‘aid’, and so it can be taken away. And his plan to eliminate the ‘free State Police patrols’ of rural NJ is in direct contradiction to their chartered purpose. It’s what their SUPPOSED to be doing!

This is the end result of consolidation.


4 posted on 04/27/2008 6:07:07 PM PDT by whatexit
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To: whatexit
"It’s what their SUPPOSED to be doing!"

This wouldn't be the work of your 'lovable' Governor? Are you a New Jerseyite/

I just wonder because I've said the same (yelling in CAPS) about my own 'lovable' Gov. Rick "Good Hair" Perry. The same **!&%! that wants another term and gave us the good things like toll roads (on roads built originally by tax dollars) and a few more special things.
5 posted on 04/27/2008 6:12:36 PM PDT by K-oneTexas (I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
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To: K-oneTexas

Wow! I didn’t think there was a worse Governor than my Governor, (”Fast Eddie”) Rendell. I stand corrected.


6 posted on 04/27/2008 6:23:50 PM PDT by appleharvey
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To: K-oneTexas
The sheeple have for too long bought into the wolves' deceptions.

America is dead. Citizen, repeat with me: "Hail Amerika."

7 posted on 04/27/2008 6:32:50 PM PDT by Clint Williams (Read Roto-Reuters -- we're the spinmeisters!)
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To: K-oneTexas

Yep, I’m in NJ - in a town that’s already 99% shared services with neighboring towns. The vast majority of our property taxes go as tuition to the next town over.


8 posted on 04/27/2008 6:40:16 PM PDT by whatexit
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To: K-oneTexas
Gov. Corzine won his reputation as a mergers and acquisitions chairman of the investment banking firm Goldman Sachs.

FWIW, he ran the TRADING side, not the m&a side. And they fired him for being a dirtbag even by THEIR standards.

9 posted on 04/27/2008 6:47:22 PM PDT by NativeNewYorker (Freepin' Jew Boy)
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To: appleharvey

“Wow! I didn’t think there was a worse Governor than my Governor, (”Fast Eddie”) Rendell. I stand corrected.”

Don’t worry Ahhnold out here in Kalifornia will “Fast Eddie” a run for his money


10 posted on 04/27/2008 6:50:54 PM PDT by Polynikes (Hey. I got a question. How are you planning to get back down that hill?)
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To: appleharvey
”Fast Eddie” huh. Pennsylvania has changed over the years. I was born there and left about 1968 after graduating High School and going into the military. Traveled around the US, Asia and Europe courtesy of Uncle Sam. Had a family to support and military wasn't a big paycheck even for an E5. Moved to Texas in 1980 for a job and stayed in the Reserves.

I enjoyed PA as a kid, beautiful countryside. I'm from South Hills of Pittsburgh. Enjoyed the location and the food, many nationalities there and all kinds of food. I should be the size of a blimp from what I ate as a kid. Good thing I'm not that size, but my uncle was.

Politics seemed to have a different 'flavor' back then. Was pretty much Dem majority but many Republicans (like me). They were not as strident as many are today. One could have a better discussion back then and facts seemed to matter more.


11 posted on 04/27/2008 7:03:32 PM PDT by K-oneTexas (I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
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To: K-oneTexas

Pretty much across the country, given the choice of keeping the revenue generated locally versus having the state steal it then give some back as ‘state aid’, most local government would take the first choice and do just fine, thank you.


12 posted on 04/27/2008 8:11:48 PM PDT by ArmstedFragg
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To: whatexit

Yep, I’m in NJ - in a town that’s already 99% shared services with neighboring towns. The vast majority of our property taxes go as tuition to the next town over.
____________

Ditto to that. Not to mention how much of our services are provided by volunteers - Corzine wants to replace volunteers with regional gov’t employees on the payroll and pension plan.

I wish he’d worked on bankrupting Goldman Sachs rather than NJ.


13 posted on 04/27/2008 8:35:40 PM PDT by heartwood
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To: K-oneTexas

Another “one size fits all” mentality.
Corzine must have rattled his pea-sized brain in that car accident.


14 posted on 04/27/2008 8:54:51 PM PDT by ridesthemiles
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To: OldFriend

Yikes. your Gov’nors get worse and worse


15 posted on 04/27/2008 9:59:38 PM PDT by holyscroller (A wise man's heart directs him toward the right, but the foolish man's heart directs him to the left)
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To: whatexit
And his plan to eliminate the ‘free State Police patrols’ of rural NJ is in direct contradiction to their chartered purpose. It’s what their SUPPOSED to be doing!

Wait a second, the purpose of the State Police isn't to form multi-car motorcades to chauffeur Corzine's elitist a$$ around at 91 miles per hour? Could've fooled me.

16 posted on 04/28/2008 6:58:27 AM PDT by jmc813 (Eek!)
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