"Accidents will happen; we only hit and run I don't wanna hear it, 'cause I know what I've done." - Elvis Costello
In a recent article published by the Delaware State Chamber of Commerce, Rick Geisenberger, Delaware's Secretary of Finance, wrote:
"The State's fiscal condition is arguably in its best shape in decades - a far cry from the $400 million budget deficit facing Delaware when Governor Carney took office in 2017.
It's no accident."
His first sentence is accurate; however, the second sentence is not. Without Federal COVID-19 money, the State would be in crisis.
History Repeats Itself
Graph 1.0 below shows Delaware's year-end (YE) fiscal cash position during the last three governors' terms (Minner, Markell, and Carney). It also reveals a "deficit-tax-spend-deficit" repetitive process that restarts every time a Governor first enters office. That cycle is:
#1 A new Governor comes into office;
#2 The State experiences a budget deficit;
#3 The Governor increases taxes;
#4 The Governor increases spending, and the cash runs out by the end of their term;
#5 Go back to step 1.
GRAPH 1.0: Minner vs. Markell vs. Carney
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