NC Is A Conservative Leader | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: This article appeared on John Hood's daily column in the Carolina Journal, which, because of Author / Publisher Hood, is linked to the John Locke Foundation.

John Hood
    RALEIGH     Among conservatives around the country, North Carolina has become a superstar - a place where innovative ideas, sustained investment, diligence, and political acumen have combined to produce an impressive string of hard-won victories.

    Within the state, however, some conservatives don't see things that way. It's interesting to consider why that may be.

    The facts are clear. Over the past five years, conservative leaders in the General Assembly have enacted a series of tax cuts and tax reforms that will foster entrepreneurship and job creation, reduce the double-taxation of savings and investment, and save taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars a year. North Carolina is one of the few states ever to have junked an outmoded, Keynesian-era tax system in favor of a modern, pro-growth Flat Tax.

    On spending, lawmakers and Gov. Pat McCrory have resisted calls by special-interest groups and liberal editorial boards to "invest" more in ineffective state programs and bureaucracies. Instead, they have maintained fiscal discipline - spending significantly more on high priorities such as upgrading public infrastructure and recruiting new teachers, to be sure, but keeping overall budget growth at or below the combined rates of inflation and population growth.

    Fiscal discipline involves preparing for the future, not just indulging the political demands of the present. Instead of blowing this year's $400 million revenue surplus on new programs, state leaders put every penny of it, and then some, into savings. They are determined not to enter a future recession with inadequate budget reserves, like their predecessors did. Recessionary budget deficits always put tremendous political pressure on governors and legislators to raise taxes. By my count, the state now has some $1.6 billion in rainy day reserves, repair and renovation reserves, Medicaid reserves, and other savings.

    Conservative achievements in North Carolina extend far beyond fiscal policy. In each of the past five years, lawmakers have enacted regulatory reform bills to eliminate counterproductive rules and streamline the process. They have dramatically expanded parental choice and competition in education by ending the cap on charter schools and creating Opportunity Scholarships for disadvantaged and disabled children whose needs might best be met in private school settings. Conservatives have won victories on a host of other fronts as well, including transportation, energy policy, property rights, election reform, and abortion.

    Even in cases where broader free-market reforms have yet to take root, conservatives have made real progress. During this year's legislative session, for example, efforts to abolish or cap North Carolina's mandate on electric utilities to purchase high-cost renewable energy fell short. But lawmakers did allow a longstanding, ridiculously generous tax credit for renewable energy projects to expire. They also failed to end North Carolina's archaic certificate-of-need regulation that limits consumer choice and competition in medical services. But they did enact some commonsense exceptions to the law that will benefit patients in a couple of local markets.

    So why are some North Carolina conservatives grumbling about their "liberal" legislators lately? I think one reason is unrealistic expectations. Having argued against abusive government subsidies and regulations in Raleigh for a quarter of a century, I am well aware of just how entrenched many of them are - and how far their beneficiaries will go to protect them. I see incremental steps as strides toward the ultimate goal. Others see them as stumbles or sidesteps.

    Still, I think North Carolina's leaders have themselves to blame for much of the disconnect. Process matters. Even good ideas sprung on citizens at the last minute, or stuffed into unrelated bills, can look precipitous or suspicious. Moreover, some of the tools lawmakers have chosen to advance their goals - such as "paying for" income tax cuts with selective expansions of the sales tax base to services - look very different to average North Carolinians than they do on paper. There's a better, broader way for the state to move to a consumption-based tax system, as I have long maintained.

    North Carolina truly deserves its national reputation as a leader of conservative reform. Within the state, however, there's work to be done on renewing relationships and rebuilding trust.
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( October 11th, 2015 @ 12:55 pm )
 
If this new NC Tax Code is so great---WHY HAVE ALL THE WORKING FOLKS GOTTEN HIGHER TAXES AND LOWER REFUNDS????

I call BS on this one, my friend.

As a small businessman my $50K new equipment credit is GONE. MEANWHILE, the rich can get a Corporate Jet Credit and the Governor is telling us he is helping --- without making Duke Energy pay for their corruption of the Haw River with their ash dumps --- now in danger of pouring into our good rivers going to the Pamlico Sound . . .

You ARE NOT the Nazi Propaganda machine telling lies big and often so fools believe you . . .



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