{"id":42153,"date":"2019-01-27T03:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-01-27T12:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-the-disconnects-in-dunleavys-economic-vision\/"},"modified":"2019-01-27T03:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-01-27T12:00:00","slug":"opinion-the-disconnects-in-dunleavys-economic-vision","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/opinion-the-disconnects-in-dunleavys-economic-vision\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: The disconnects in Dunleavy’s economic vision"},"content":{"rendered":"
Gov. Mike Dunleavy was supposed to “detail his vision for Alaska” in his first State of the State address<\/a> on Monday. But he offered no specifics for “helping grow our economy” or putting the state on “a path towards a permanent fiscal plan.” Instead, he delivered a vision grounded in wishful thinking.<\/p>\n Dunleavy described the three constitutional amendments<\/a> he’ll soon introduce as “the foundation” of his fiscal plan. The first includes “a spending limit and savings plan” that will allow the state “to save excess revenue when possible for future Alaskans.”<\/p>\n Nice idea. But it won’t help now because there’s no excess revenue to save.<\/p>\n The other two would prevent future governors and legislators from altering the amount of the Permanent Fund Dividend or raising taxes without a vote of the people.<\/p>\n [Gov’s crime message resonates, but Juneau lawmakers hesitant about constitutional amendments]<\/a><\/ins><\/p>\n Getting any of these through the Legislature requires support by two-thirds of each chamber. That’s not likely to happen. Even if it did, the amendments still require voter approval, and the earliest that will be is the general election in November 2020.<\/p>\n Dunleavy can bypass the Legislature only if the people vote to convene a Constitutional Convention. But that can’t happen anytime soon either.<\/p>\n So, all three proposed amendments, even if he could get them passed, are irrelevant for balancing the budget the next two cycles.<\/p>\n The other dream he’d like to come true in the “near future” is about “all of the new industries coming to Alaska.”<\/p>\n To make it happen he’s put together “a team of experts with backgrounds in finance, marketing and research that will inform investors, industries and individuals that Alaska is open for business.” And as proof that “good old-fashioned capitalism and entrepreneurship” is all it takes to succeed in our high cost, cold and faraway northern setting, he offered the stories of two small Alaska businesses.<\/p>\n