『Rainy Day or Taxpayer Idle Cash? Rethinking Arizona's Budget Reserves』のカバーアート

Rainy Day or Taxpayer Idle Cash? Rethinking Arizona's Budget Reserves

Rainy Day or Taxpayer Idle Cash? Rethinking Arizona's Budget Reserves

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

In this episode of Birdman at the Arizona Legislature, Birdman steps away from the Capitol and into the studio to unpack a debate that surfaced during caucus: Arizona's Rainy Day Fund — and whether it should even exist.

The discussion began around stabilizing funding for the Department of Public Safety (DPS). A proposal was floated to use interest earnings from the state's $1.5 billion Rainy Day Fund to support DPS operations. But that quickly sparked a bigger philosophical question raised by Representative Neal Carter - District 15

Why does the state need a Rainy Day Fund at all?

Birdman breaks down the numbers:

  • $1.5 billion sitting in reserve

  • What 1% interest generates annually

  • How many Arizona taxpayers actually pay income tax

  • What that reserve represents per taxpayer

The episode explores broader questions:

  • Should the government operate like a business?

  • Is holding large reserves responsible fiscal policy — or idle taxpayer capital?

  • If a Rainy Day Fund exists, what qualifies as a "rainy day"?

  • Should disaster relief, DPS funding, or economic downturns trigger its use?

This isn't framed as a partisan debate — but as a taxpayer's perspective on government budgeting, reserves, and accountability.

If you care about Arizona's budget, fiscal philosophy, tax policy, or government reserves, this episode dives into the numbers and the bigger question:

Should the government save money — or spend only what it collects each year?

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