Tax Receipts Rebound, But………..
Posted By thestatedtruth.com on March 30, 2010
By Dunstan McNichol
March 30 (Bloomberg) — The two-year slide in tax collections that opened a $196 billion gap in U.S. state budgets has stopped, easing pressure on credit ratings and giving leeway to lawmakers as they craft spending plans for next year.
The 15 largest states by population forecast a 3.9 percent gain in tax revenue in fiscal 2011, budget documents show. The 50 states on average may increase collections by about 3.5 percent, the first time in two years the figure is expected to grow, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com,
California took in 3.9 percent more since December than projected in January, Controller John Chiang said this month. New York got $129 million above forecasts in its budget year through February, according to a report from Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli. In New Jersey, the second-wealthiest state per capita, January sales-tax collections were 1.9 percent higher than a year earlier, the first annual increase in 19 months, forecasters said in a report last month.
“This time last year, we were sliding down a mountain, said David Rosen, chief budget officer for the New Jersey Legislature. I don’t think we are now; it’s stabilized.
States collected about $79 billion less in sales, income and corporate taxes in 2009 than in 2008, the U.S. Census Bureau said today in a report, as the economy struggled through its deepest slump since the Great Depression. Emergency spending cuts and tax increases became routine during the recession that began in December 2007.
more…..http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aKBVswcpwXBE
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But………………
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California State Controller Chiang:
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State Budget Crisis Will Get Worse
State Controller John Chiang said Monday the worst of California’s budget crisis is still to come.
Although lawmakers are challenged by a nearly $20 billion deficit, “the bad year’s 2012,” Chiang said.
That year, state finances will be hit with a trifecta of pain: the temporary tax hikes approved last year will be over; federal stimulus funds will be gone; and funds that the state “raided” from local governments will come due.
The deficit at that point will be some $25 billion, according to Schwarzenegger administration estimates.
And finances in later years aren’t great either: last year, the Legislative Analyst Office released a report projecting a $20 billion deficit every year for the next five years.
But not even those highly publicized numbers tell the full story, said Chiang, the chief fiscal officer for the state.
Chiang said California also owes its own “special” state funds some $20 billion that it has borrowed in recent years to close deficits. He was referring to pots of money outside the state’s general fund.
And state employee health and pension benefits are not being adequately budgeted, he said.
“(A solution) is going to take a lot of legislators getting off the sidelines,” Chiang said.
“Yet we haven’t solved anything this year,”
Read more: http://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_14782375?source=rss_viewed#ixzz0jhTG4J87
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Tax Receipts Rebound As 15 Biggest
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