(Ron Knecht) – A recent Brookings Institute study on economic growth in Nevada concluded that we must innovate and diversify – which we already knew.  I hope its proposals to “unleash” growth produce more than those from previous studies, but only time will tell.

However, the study was marred by a high-profile false claim it made that provided red meat for the statists who dominate academe and the mainstream media.  Smash-mouth left-wing pundit Jon Ralston trumpeted gleefully Brookings’ claim that Nevada not only underfunds higher education, but is last among comparable states by a significant margin.

The claim is a classic Big Lie.  Nevada’s higher education funding is in the mainstream and even high by some measures.

Brookings’ first major error is to assume that the fraction of its economy a state spends on college varies with its population.  So, Brookings compares five states with populations of 2- to 3-million to Nevada (2.7-million), even though that range yields four states slightly larger than Nevada and one state much smaller.

But there is no correlation of states’ economic fractions with their populations, which is why no one else uses this practice.  Standard practice compares state college funding regionally (such as western states) or on a national basis.  Brookings’ method cherry-picked states ranked 1, 2, 6, 16 and 19 out of 50 as its standard for Nevada.

Second, Brookings’ use of the economic fraction as a comparative-funding metric is also one that, for good reason, no one else uses.  This fraction is useful for comparing broader aggregates such as total public spending, and it can have limited use for education funding in a given state over time.

However, it is misleading in comparing states, due to large differences in the portions of states’ populations that attend college.  If one state’s college-going rate is twice that of another, it’s ridiculous to suggest that college spending should be the same fraction of their economies.

A well-known major Nevada problem is that too few of our people attend college (especially in high-value majors).  Brookings’ metric obscures that problem to reach the conclusion Brookings and Ralston always seek – namely, that more public spending, higher taxes and further government intervention are needed.  The proper education funding measure, used almost universally, is state spending per student.

Using the per-student measure, Nevada’s taxpayer support for higher education is 29th among the 50 states, merely two percent below the national average.  Using the western states, as most studies do, Nevada’s funding is almost nine percent above average.

How misleading are Brookings and Ralston?  Consider faculty pay.  Using their five states as the standard, Nevada faculty pay is 25 percent above market, even though it is 0.65 percent below the western average.  Nationally, Nevada faculty pay is 10th among the 50 states, seven percent above the national average.

In short, Nevada tax funding of education and faculty pay are mainstream to somewhat higher.  So, Brookings and Ralston’s biased and shoddy claim is completely misleading.

Nevada higher education regents, administrators and faculty are working to improve academic quality, do strategic planning and management in a new competitive environment, and meet numerous other challenges of a Great Recession caused mainly by public-sector excesses that Brookings, Ralston and other statists promote.  Our efforts are hindered, not helped, by the Chicken Little squawks of ideologues and special interests.

(Regent Ron Knecht of Carson City is an economist with background also in law, mathematics, science, engineering, liberal arts and public policy.  Additional information at www.RonKnecht.com.)

 
 
It’s a bad idea for state workers to serve in the Legislature. This is why the Separation Of Powers Clause is in the Nevada Constitution.

And now the Nevada Policy Research Institute (NPRI) has filed a lawsuit to force government workers serving in the Legislature to choose either their government job or being a legislator. After all, as the old saying goes, a dog can’t serve two masters.

Indeed, state Sen. Ben Kieckhefer (R-Reno) quit his government job at the Department of Health and Human Services after being elected in 2010. And on Thursday, Sen. Kieckhefer tweeted: “I left my job with DHHS the day after I was elected specifically to preserve separation of powers. It’s important.”

Senator Kieckhefer, I agree.

All told, about 20 percent of state legislators are government employees. Only two of them, however, are Republicans like Kieckhefer. And one of them is moderate Assemblyman Scott Hammond…who Kieckhefer has endorsed over conservative non-state worker Assemblyman Richard McArthur in the SD-18 race next year.

For Sen. Kieckhefer to be consistent, he needs to publicly call for Hammond to do exactly what Kieckhefer himself did; resign his government job if he wishes to continue serving in the Legislature. After all, it’s the only way to preserve that separation of powers, right? And it’s important, right? Senator?

On another note, I have heard that this practice of ignoring the Nevada Constitution has been allowed as the Constitution also states that it is up to the Legislature itself to decide who is eligible to serve.

Isn’t this a case of the fox guarding the hen house? Can we really expect our State Legislators to be the ones who decide who is eligible?

Although the Nevada Constitution does state that the Legislators decide the eligibility of its’ members to serve, the Legislature cannot violate the Nevada Constitution in making their decision.

The Nevada Legislators do have a guideline in making the decision on whether or not one, or more, of its’ members are aligible. It is Art. 3 Sec 1, the Separation of Powers Clause.

In other words, just because we have the foxes guarging the hen house, they cannot ignore (violate) other parts of the Nevada Copnstitution. If we had elected officials who actually followed their Oath of Office, we wouldn’t be in this situation.

The Separation of Powers Clause is clear when it states “…and no persons charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any functions, appertaining to either of the others…” (emphasis mine)

Yes, “any function” means that even a janitor must quit his job if he/she wishes to serve as a member of the Legislature.

The Nevada Constitution is clear. If a public employee wishes to serve in the Nevada Legislature, they MUST quit their public employee job.

To Assemblyman Scott Hammond, and all the other Public Employee/Legislators, you have two choices. Either quit your public employee job, immediately, or resign your position as State Legislator.