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DOGE can learn from North Carolina

4President-elect Donald Trump has tapped business leaders Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to head up the Department of Government Efficiency, an initiative that isn’t really a department but could do some good — as long as its leaders carefully study past efforts at reform.
I don’t just mean federal efforts such as the moderately successful Greenspan Commission on Social Security and the largely unsuccessful Grace Commission, both created in the early 1980s at the behest of President Ronald Reagan. Some states have achieved big regulatory and budget reforms, including our own.
In 2009, state General Fund spending accounted for 6.2% of North Carolina’s gross domestic product. This year, it’s 4.5%. If policymakers in Washington could manage the same percentage-point change in federal spending as a share of GDP, that would slash annual deficits by more than a quarter, or about $450 billion a year.
It wouldn’t happen overnight, however. While some of North Carolina’s budget restraint occurred during a fiscal crisis precipitated by the Great Recession of 2008-10 — when Democrats, not Republicans, ran the General Assembly — most occurred over the next dozen years, with GOP majorities in both chambers.
Conservative leaders didn’t stomp in with reckless abandon, whacking state programs and laying off large swaths of public employees. Instead, they employed formulas and targets. They capped annual spending growth at the combined rate of inflation and population growth. Within that cap, they raised spending on high-priority programs and offset that with savings elsewhere.
Furthermore, when state lawmakers began large-scale tax reform in 2013, they phased in rate reductions over time, using “fiscal triggers” to ensure that tax revenues kept growing at a sufficient rate to fund core public services.
And when they began thinning the state’s regulatory thicket, they did so in stages, in a series of annual reform bills, rather than attempting some sort of comprehensive package in one fell swoop.
In other words, North Carolina’s fiscal and regulatory reformers played the tortoise, not the hare.
Does that strategy sound too timid, or at least too boring, for the likes of Musk and Ramaswamy? Perhaps it is, but history suggests that it’s the only approach likely to accomplish lasting results.
There’s no shortage of good ideas for reforming federal regulation and shrinking the federal deficit. Plenty of experts inside and outside government, from members and staffers on Capitol Hill to fiscal analysts with vast experience in the U.S. Office of Management and Budget or other agencies, have assembled long lists of actionable ideas — and are currently sharing them with the leaders and soon-to-be staffers of DOGE.
What disappointing efforts such as the Grace Commission and the 2010 National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform (co-chaired by North Carolinian Erskine Bowles) lacked was a realistic strategy for translating ideas into policy.
No wasteful program exists by accident. Some interest group lobbied for it, and will lobby vociferously to protect it.
Musk and Ramaswamy predict that many of their ideas can be implemented through executive action, without a vote of Congress. That’s possible — but it’s not really where the fiscal action is. For example, while downsizing the federal workforce may be a good idea, the federal payroll represents only about 4.3% of federal spending.
The vast majority of federal expenditures consists of interest payments, national defense, and transfer programs such as Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. The first category is inescapable and the second rising in priority as the world gets increasingly dangerous.
Campaign rhetoric aside, there’s really no way to shrink federal deficits by a noticeable amount without taking on the entitlement state.
Which brings us back to formulas and triggers. No serious person, not a single one, favors immediate, large-scale cuts in such programs. The only viable strategy is precisely the one that, in a different context, North Carolina pursued: phasing in reforms over time, giving affected parties time to plan and adjust.
Easier said than done — but it can be done, as our own case demonstrates.

Editor’s note: John Hood is a John Locke Foundation board member. His latest books, Mountain Folk and Forest Folk, combine epic fantasy with early American history (FolkloreCycle.com).

(Photo: The North Carolina capitol building in Raleigh. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

The last of the Baby Boomers

5Once upon a time, there was a tribe of superior people called the Greatest Generation. They kept themselves busy surviving the Great Depression and winning World War II.
When they weren’t otherwise engaged, they also generated Baby Boomers. The Greatest Generation has mostly gone to the Other Side. In their wake, they left a large cohort of aging Baby Boomers. Boomers began in 1946 right after World War II ended. The guys came home from the War and got busy with the gals. They created Boomers until 1964 when production ceased
Baby Boomers are easily identified as most are now free-range retirees. They appear in coffee shops resolving world issues and arguing over why NIL money and the Transfer Portal are spoiling college sports. Their hearing is impaired through long-term exposure to the calendar, loud rock music, and the Viet Nam war. They frequently receive funds from an obsolete concept known as a pension.
Male Boomers can be identified by the large trucks they drive, short pants with their belts up under their armpits, and memories of Grace Slick as a major babe. Female Boomers can be distinguished by annual shrinking in height, shopping at Outlet Malls, and enormous collections of shoes that procreate in their closets.
I am allowed to make fun of Baby Boomers because I am one. Being a retired Boomer is like the childhood period before school age.
It took me about 15 seconds to get used to it. You get to take naps. Play with your friends. Argue over which baseball team is best. Have ice cream when you want it. Retirement can create a sense of freedom like what the 43 escaped monkeys must be feeling who escaped the research facility in South Carolina.
Freed Rhesus monkeys got nothing on retired Boomers. Run Rhesus Run!
A recent fact-finding trip to Washington DC with another Boomer couple provided museums, sights seen, and dazzling costs of everything in the big city.
The National Zoo allowed us to almost see the new Pandas Bao LI and Qing Bao. Unfortunately, they are currently in quarantine. The National Zoo is free. However, it costs $30 to park your car.
The National Museum of American History has an exhibit called Entertainment Nation which produced an unsettling realization.
Boomers are now officially ancient history like the Aztecs. There is a display of toys Boomers played with in the 1950s. The objects are labeled like Medieval artifacts. Our toys are treated as relics from a distant forgotten past.
Like a 1950s Rosetta Stone, the curators try to understand how the childhood of Boomers led to America today. As Rod Stewart sang while gyrating in tight spandex pants: “Every picture tells a story/ Don’t it?” The picture which appears with this column makes one major point- Baby Boomers are an endangered species who are on their way out the door.
Kindly marvel at things that amused us mid-20th century before going back to Doom Scrolling on your Smart Phone.
In the display case, we see Howdy Doody suspended above the Howdy Doody TV Game box which shows Howdy, Clarabell the Clown, and a curious creature called Flub-A-Dub.
Mr. Dub deserves a thorough examination. He was a biological freak made up of 1950s genetic engineering gone horribly wrong, but in a cute way that appealed to kids.
Mix DNA from a duck-billed platypus, a giraffe’s neck, and a dachshund’s body, you get Mr. Dub whose favorite food was spaghetti. Next are the actual hat and coat of Captain Kangaroo, the Lord Mayor of the TV Treasure House.
He held court with Mr. Green Jeans, Mr. Moose master dumper of ping pong balls, Bunny Rabbit who tricked his way into carrots, and Grandfather Clock who kept falling asleep. The Captain’s best character was the startlingly weird Banana Man.
The Banana Man dressed like a hobo (Note: Back then they were called Hobos, prior to becoming called Homeless). The Banana Man wore a giant coat with enormous pockets from which he would pull huge bunches of bananas. When he pulled out the bananas he would intone in a very high voice: “OOOOH, BANANAS.” He was always surprised by the bananas. This was the height of humor for mid-century 6-year-olds. It remains pretty funny today.
The freak show that was the Boomers’ childhoods is completed with the mandatory set of Mickey Mouse ears and lunch box. Cookie Monster and his cookie appear. Mary Poppin’s headless dress rises over a framed picture of Bugs Bunny.
Who were the Baby Boomers? No one knows. They had goofy toys. Soon they will be dust in the wind. Their toys will remain as objects of curiosity from a bygone time.

(Photo: The National Museum of American History has an exhibit called Entertainment Nation, which holds artifacts from Baby Boomers' childhoods. Photo by Pitt Dickey) 

Candidates should have talked about roads

5During the homestretch of the 2024 election, I complained repeatedly about the absence of serious engagement by presidential and congressional candidates with the critical issue of the national debt. Most said virtually nothing about the eye-popping federal deficits of the past few years, while others claimed that excising “waste, fraud, and abuse” or “making billionaires pay their fair share” would solve the problem — which is mathematically impossible.
Today I’ll discuss another glaring oversight: few candidates in North Carolina races, from governor and state legislature to county and municipal offices, have said anything of consequence about the gap between what we need to spend on roads and the revenue we’re collecting from the users of those roads.
Although our state enjoys many advantages, from pro-enterprise tax and regulatory policies to bountiful natural and human resources, inadequate transportation infrastructure will impose constraints on future growth and development.
And in a broad swath of western North Carolina, Hurricane Helene deepened the hole.
My colleague Joseph Harris serves as fiscal policy analyst at the John Locke Foundation. In a new analysis, Harris pointed out that most of the state’s $7.3 billion in revenue to the Highway Fund and Highway Trust Fund last year came from either state or federal taxes levied on motor fuels. Another 18% derived from the Highway Use Tax (essentially a sales tax on autos) and 15% from auto registrations and other fees collected by the Division of Motor Vehicles.
The remaining sliver comes from General Fund taxes — including a portion of the sales taxes applied to auto parts and other highway-related expenditures. When the state legislature began to phase in that transfer a couple of years ago, I said that it “comes closer to meeting our highway needs while respecting the user-pay principle than does any other solution that can be practically adopted at the moment.”
It was a good start. But even when fully implemented, the sales-tax transfer won’t close the gap. As the cars and trucks traversing North Carolina streets and highways become increasingly fuel-efficient, or powered by something other than motor fuel, the amount of tax collected per mile driven will continue to decline — and its purchasing power, due to rising prices for paving material and labor, will decline even faster.
One solution would be to raise the tax rate on motor fuels to offset the effects of inflation and fuel economy. The General Assembly has already done that, in a roundabout way, but I suspect attempting to do it again would provoke a political firestorm.
The more-sensible solution is to charge motorists for using roads not according to how much fuel they buy but to how much they drive. I’ve long supported the idea of a mileage-based user fee to replace the gas tax.
Harris made a similar recommendation, suggesting the version that presents the fewest administrative challenges: an annual charge when renewing a vehicle’s registration, computed by comparing odometer readings. Unlike a GPS-based system, this creates no privacy challenges. On the other hand, there’s no way to know what share of total mileage happened in North Carolina. (Of course, that’s also true for gas taxes, which are collected where you fill up, not necessarily where you drive most of your miles.)
According to his calculations, the state would need to charge $0.0178 per mile traveled to produce the same amount of revenue it currently receives from the motor-fuels tax. That would average about $266 per driver. The legislature would then regularly adjust the rate to account for inflation, which is how the new system would boost revenue over the current (steadily declining) baseline.
Most policymakers I know, Republicans and Democrats alike, recognize that North Carolina must make this change, or something comparable, in order to build and maintain the roads and bridges we need. But earning the trust of North Carolinians on this issue will require talking about it, a lot — which is why I see the just-completed campaign as a missed opportunity.

Editor’s note: John Hood is a John Locke Foundation board member. His latest books, Mountain Folk and Forest Folk, combine epic fantasy with early American history (FolkloreCycle.com).

What we have learned from this election

4Last week, I yielded my space to the newly elected County Commission member, Kirk deViere. He had a message for this community, and he used Up & Coming Weekly to go “on the record” about his commitment to Cumberland County residents. This is what local community newspapers do: education and awareness. Once you go on the record in print, you own the message, unlike unvetted social media posts or electronic newsletters that evaporate practically overnight. Up & Coming Weekly is committed to being this community’s voice. Below is an article submitted by Fayetteville resident Mary Zahran. It’s her evaluation and opinion, and she owns it. Every business, organization, or person, including elected officials, we come in contact with know that they have unfeathered access to share their thoughts and opinions with our U&CW readers. Enjoy, and thank you for reading Up & Coming Weekly.
— Bill Bowman, publisher

The 2024 election has come and gone, and two things are certain—Donald Trump is returning to the White House, and Republicans will control both the Senate and the House.
Amid this backdrop of an overwhelming Republican victory, one question remains—what has been learned from this election? Judging by some of the statements many Democrats have made, it doesn't appear they have begun asking themselves why they lost. Instead, they seem to be doubling down on their determination to thwart Trump's efforts to reverse many of the policies of the Biden-Harris administration.
Several Democratic governors have already issued statements threatening to fight Trump to protect the freedoms of their citizens. For these and other Democratic governors, their citizens include illegal immigrants that Trump has promised to deport. They are declaring war on Trump before he even gets into office, and their belligerence suggests they will not change their minds.
Instead of devoting their time and energy to creating a Trump resistance movement, perhaps they should engage in some honest introspection to find out why they lost in the first place. In the days following this election, all we have heard from most of the Democratic world is that either their messaging was not successful or that Trump supporters are stupid. If the MAGA voters had only been more intelligent and more aware of all the achievements of the Biden-Harris administration that have improved their lives, they would never have voted the way they did.
It didn't occur to them that the policies implemented during the last four years are not considered successful by most Americans. On Biden's first day in office, he began signing executive orders reversing most of Trump's policies. Biden revoked the Keystone XL pipeline permit, costing Americans thousands of jobs. He also signed an order to immediately halt the construction of the U.S.-Mexico border wall. He soon ended the Remain in Mexico agreement, a policy that significantly reduced the number of illegal immigrants crossing the border.
By signing these orders, Biden created conditions that would cause severe problems for many Americans. His attack on the fossil fuel industry led to an increase in gas and oil prices and helped to contribute to overall inflation. His decision to open the Southern border, allowing millions of illegal immigrants to come into the country, led to financial hardships for sanctuary cities as they tried to house and feed their new residents.
Because there was little, if any, vetting of these immigrants, numerous gangs entered, causing an increase in crime not only in sanctuary cities but throughout the country.
In addition to ignoring the disastrous domestic policies of this administration, Democrats have also ignored its catastrophic foreign policies. When Biden described our withdrawal from Afghanistan in August of 2021 as an "extraordinary success," many Americans disagreed. They had spent countless hours watching this catastrophe unfold in real-time, and many began to fear his weakness as a leader on the world stage would create other problems abroad.
Perhaps Democrats didn't connect Biden's fiasco in Afghanistan with Putin's invasion of Ukraine. Maybe they didn't believe that Biden's payments of billions of dollars to the Iranians would enable them to finance proxy wars in the Middle East, including the October 7th attack on Israel by Hamas. These are ongoing conflicts that Trump will have to deal with when he begins his second term as president.
Perhaps the Democrats will never learn that their blatant indifference to the safety and well-being of Americans is the reason for their defeat. When you pass legislation or endorse policies that create financial hardships for people, when you appear indifferent to their suffering because of violent crime that you choose to ignore, or when you dismiss their concerns about cultural issues that allow men to play in women's sports or allow minors to have "gender affirming surgery" without parental consent, don't be surprised when they vote you out of office.
Say what you will about Trump's many flaws; one thing he knows that Democrats do not know and will probably never learn is that successful leaders care deeply about the people they are elected to serve.

What about our democracy

5aAmericans now know who our next President will be, and plans are well underway for the new administration—who will have a part in it and what they hope to achieve. In the meantime, we, the people, have some thinking to do ourselves.
Germany’s Wurzburg University has developed a Democracy Matrix, a tool for measuring the quality of democracies in nearly 200 nations around the world. Nations are classified as Working Democracies (35 in 2020) and Deficient Democracies (36-81). Everyone else (82-176) is some version of hybrid or autocracy.
Suffice it to say, the United States has not done itself proud, placing # 36 at the top of the Deficient Democracy list. It is a poor and embarrassing showing, but at least better than the lowest-ranked nation, Eritrea, a Hard Autocracy. The top 5 democracies in the world are Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden, and Germany, with other European nations, several Asian countries, and a few Caribbean islands rounding out the Working Democracy list.
The state of our United States democracy now and in the future was a hotly debated issue during the Presidential campaign, with ugly words exchanged among candidates, families, and friends, some with painful and long-lasting consequences. There are measures, though, that we can consider and possibly take to protect and improve our democracy.
We must understand and acknowledge that while our Constitution has been the model for other democracies that followed our lead, it is neither infallible nor sacrosanct. It was conceived and written by educated white men in the 18th century who were creating a new form of government that did not address most people, including women and people of color. It is rife with compromises made to reach consensus agreements. The US has adopted only 27 Constitutional amendments in more than 2 centuries, while other more recent and higher ranked democracies view their constitutions as works in progress needing adjustments as time moves forward.
Two Harvard political scientists, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, suggest several structural changes to our government in their book, Tyranny of the Minority. One is to elect our Presidents by popular vote, not through the Electoral College, a compromise structure established to keep less populous states from being overpowered by their more populous neighbors. Another is to establish term limits for members of the US Supreme Court. Very few other nations allow life-time political appointments, and few have decision-makers serving into their 90s. The authors also note that the US Senate, like the Electoral College, provides far more clout to less populated states than to more populated, again a Constitutional compromise more than 250 years ago. For example, our least populous state, Wyoming, has the same number of US Senators as our most populous state, California, giving the almost 600 individual Wyoming citizens far more representation than the almost 39-M individual Californians. The political scientists also note that some democracies have done away with their “upper chambers” altogether,” retaining one chamber with representation by population. Both Denmark and Finland have one legislative chamber.
Such changes would require Constitutional amendments, no small achievement. Amendments to our Constitution require a 2/3s vote by Congress and then approval by 2/3 of the states, within 7 years. In other words, it a long and arduous process. The last Constitutional amendment attempted, the Equal Rights Amendment, passed Congress in 1972 but failed when the state approval clock timed out.
As the dust settles on this contentious and painful election year, we Americans of all political stripes would be wise to seek ways to make our government and our elections more responsive to all citizens of the United States.
It is also worth noting that the Harvard political scientists have another book, also about democracies. It is called How Democracies Die: What History Reveals About Our Future.

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