Right vs. Left in the Midwest
The Heads of State
By LAWRENCE R. JACOBS
Published: November 23, 2013
MINNESOTA and Wisconsin share much more than bone-chilling winters:
German and Northern European roots; farming; and, until recently, a
populist progressive tradition stretching back a century to Wisconsin’s
Fighting Bob La Follette and the birth of Minnesota’s
Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party.
But in 2010 these cousin states diverged. By doing so they began a
natural experiment that compares the agendas of modern progressivism and
the new right. Wisconsin elected Republicans to majorities in the
Legislature and selected a bold and vigorous Republican governor, Scott
Walker. Minnesotans elected one of the most progressive candidates for
governor in the country, Mark Dayton of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor
Party.
A month after Mr. Walker’s inauguration in January 2011, he catapulted
himself to the front ranks of national conservative leaders with attacks
on the collective bargaining rights of Civil Service unions and sharp
reductions in taxes and spending. Once Mr. Dayton teamed up with a
Democratic Legislature in 2012, Minnesota adopted some of the most
progressive policies in the country.
Minnesota raised taxes by $2.1 billion, the largest increase in recent
state history. Democrats introduced the fourth highest income tax
bracket in the country and targeted the top 1 percent of earners to pay
62 percent of the new taxes, according to the Department of Revenue.
Which side of the experiment — the new right or modern progressivism —
has been most effective in increasing jobs and improving business
opportunities, not to mention living conditions?
Obviously, firm answers will require more time and more data, but the
first round of evidence gives the edge to Minnesota’s model of increased
services, higher costs (mostly for the affluent) and reduced payments
to entrenched interests like the insurers who cover the Medicaid
population.
Three years into Mr. Walker’s term, Wisconsin lags behind Minnesota in
job creation and economic growth. As a candidate, Mr. Walker promised to produce 250,000 private-sector jobs in his first term, but a year before the next election that number is less than 90,000. Wisconsin ranks 34th
for job growth. Mr. Walker’s defenders blame the higher spending and
taxes of his Democratic predecessor for these disappointments, but
according to Forbes’s annual list of best states for business, Wisconsin
continues to rank in the bottom half.
Along with California, Minnesota is the fifth fastest growing state economy, with private-sector job growth exceeding pre-recession levels. Forbes rates Minnesota
as the eighth best state for business. Republicans deserve some of the
credit, particularly for their commitment to education reform. They also
argue that Minnesota’s new growth stems from the low taxes and reduced
spending under Mr. Dayton’s Republican predecessor, Tim Pawlenty. But
Minnesota’s job growth was subpar during Mr. Pawlenty’s eight-year
tenure and recovered only under Mr. Dayton.
Higher taxes and economic growth in Minnesota have attracted a
surprisingly broad coalition. Businesses complain about taxes, but many
cheered Mr. Dayton’s investments in the Mayo Clinic, the new Vikings
stadium, the Mall of America and 3M headquarters.
The lion’s share of Minnesota’s new tax revenue was sunk into human
capital. While the state’s Constitution required that half of the new
revenue balance the budget in 2013, Mr. Dayton invested 71 percent of
the remaining funds in K-12 schools and higher education as well as a
pair of firsts: all-day kindergarten and wider access to early childhood
education. Minnesota was one of the few states that raised education
spending under the cloud of the Great Recession.
By contrast, Mr. Walker’s strategy limited Wisconsin’s ability to invest
in infrastructure that would have catalyzed private-sector expansion,
and he cut state funding of K-12 schools by more than 15 percent. Per
student, this was the seventh sharpest decline in the country.
Health care presents another difference. When Mr. Walker refused to
establish a state health insurance exchange or to expand Medicaid, even
though the federal government covered all costs for three years and most
costs after that, ideology trumped pragmatism. The uninsured and the
ill bear the burden. Many of the 10 percent of uninsured Wisconsinites
were denied new Medicaid benefits and were shunted off to the federal
exchange’s stumbling website.
Mr. Dayton is on course to improve Minnesota’s already low uninsured rate. He expanded Medicaid to cover an additional 35,000 people
and accepted Washington’s offer to pick up the cost — as half the
states, including a growing number with Republican governors, have. Mr.
Dayton also created a state insurance exchange, which enrolled more than 90 percent
of its first month’s target. Meanwhile, Minnesota’s tradition of
innovative medical care and nonprofit insurers produced premiums in its
insurance exchange that are, on average, the lowest in the country, well below premiums in Wisconsin.
Mr. Dayton’s embrace of progressive fiscal policy is matched by a fierce
crackdown on lenient payments to insiders. Cuts in payments to managed
care organizations serving Medicaid saved $175 million and produced
lower rates in 2013 than in 2010, despite higher costs over all.
Of course, liberal aspirations contend with stubborn realities.
Minnesota is a health reform pioneer, but it is dogged by entrenched
problems in rural areas, where medical costs and premiums remain
relatively high and the capacity of medical care providers may be
overstretched by new demand. As for fiscal policy, Mr. Dayton would
have applied sales taxes more broadly, while lowering their rates, but
faced intense protests from a broad section of businesses and Democratic
legislators who blocked him.
Even after tempering their initial plans, Democrats face a backlash. According to a recent Minnesota Chamber of Commerce survey, a quarter
of Minnesota companies — a 10-year high — describe the state’s business
climate as worse than elsewhere. Mr. Dayton and his colleagues got the
message and are likely to roll back new sales taxes on farm equipment
and warehousing facilities that had threatened to leave.
Evidence and common sense should matter more in our overheated political
debates. The lesson from the upper Midwest is that rigid anti-tax dogma
fails to deliver a convincing optimistic vision that widens economic
opportunity and security. The excesses of liberalism may lurk, but
Minnesota is building a modern progressivism that plows a hopeful path.
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