But tax
revenues aren’t the real problem. Illinois’ perennial budget crises stem
from the state’s persistent overspending and misplaced spending priorities.
The 2016 budget gridlock is the culmination of years of fiscal mismanagement
under Illinois House of Representatives Speaker Mike Madigan’s leadership.
A look at the state’s
budget numbers since Madigan came to power as House speaker shows the state
has had ample tax revenues – now and over the past 30 years – but has
consistently mismanaged its spending. Illinois has repeatedly prioritized
government- worker pay and benefits over core services. That’s led to
Illinois’ dramatic fiscal decline and the current budget crisis.
Here are the facts:
-
Illinois has
more than enough tax revenue
State per capita tax revenues have grown 70 percent more than inflation over
the last 33 years. As a result, Illinois collected $265 billion more than it
would have if per capita tax revenues had only grown at the rate of
inflation since 1983. That’s true even during shorter, more recent time
periods. From 2003 to 2016, Illinois collected an average of $5.4 billion a
year in additional tax revenues per capita, well above what the state
would’ve brought in if tax revenues had only grown at the rate of inflation
since 2003.
-
Illinois
politicians continue to spend more money than the state takes in
Despite those plentiful tax revenues, Illinois has not had a balanced budget
since 2001. That problem will only worsen as the nearly $170 billion in
unfunded promises made with respect to state-worker retirements come due.
Pension costs alone now consume 25 percent of the entire state general fund
budget.
-
Politicians’
spending priorities are misplaced
The
state of Illinois spends a significant portion of its budget on worker pay,
health coverage and pensions, which has crowded out funding for core
government services. Funding for state-worker pay and benefits increased by
nearly 600 percent from 2000 to 2015. That contrasts sharply with funding
for core services, which stagnated during that same period. Higher education
spending is down 8 percent, human services funding is up only 10 percent,
public safety spending is up 12 percent, and funding for K-12 education is
up 35 percent.
-
Record tax
hikes didn’t fix Illinois’ budget problems
The
massive 2011-2014 income-tax hike did nothing to solve Illinois’ fiscal
crisis or fund social services. Instead, the additional tax revenues fueled
Illinois’ failed spending priorities: government-worker pay and benefits.
Politicians doubled payments to pensions during those four years, while
funding for K-12 and higher education actually fell by nearly 10 percent.
Any
tax increases will only put additional pressure on overburdened taxpayers
and encourage more residents to seek opportunities in other states. Illinois
already has the fourth-highest state and local tax burden as a percentage of
income, and that includes the highest property taxes in the nation.
Illinois needs a
balanced budget
The 2016 battle over
Illinois’ budget is the culmination of years of fiscal mismanagement.
Despite the receipt of
more than enough tax revenues to fund core government services, lawmakers
have consistently spent more than the state has taken in. And rather than
ensure that social services and other vital programs are prioritized,
they’ve made state-worker pay and benefits untouchable.
That’s why Illinois
isn’t funding its social services and universities even though the state
will spend at near record levels in 2016.
Without significant
reforms to the way state government operates, this crowding out will
continue. Expenses will continue to outpace inflation and population growth
and the incomes of the taxpayers who fund government.
Illinois needs a
balanced budget, not through tax hikes, but rather through an honest
prioritization of spending and real economic growth. The reality is, unless
Illinois reforms its core cost drivers and reinvigorates its economy, no
amount of tax revenue will ever be enough.
INTRODUCTION
Tax-hike
proponents claim there’s no way to fix Illinois’ chronic budget problems without
more money. They want Illinoisans to believe that the state’s tax revenues
simply aren’t enough to cover the cost of government.
But tax revenues
aren’t the real problem. Illinois’ perennial budget crises stem from the state’s
per- sistent overspending and its misplaced spending priorities. The 2016 budget
gridlock is the culmina- tion of years of fiscal mismanagement under House
Speaker Mike Madigan’s leadership.
A look at the
state’s budget numbers since Madigan came to power as House speaker shows the
state has had ample tax revenues – now and over the past 30 years – but has
consistently misman- aged its spending. Illinois has repeatedly prioritized
government-worker pay and benefits over core services. That’s led to Illinois’
dramatic fiscal decline and the current budget crisis.
Here are the
facts:
- Illinois has
more than enough tax revenue: State per capita revenues have grown 70
percent more than inflation over the last 33 years. As a result, Illinois
collected $265 billion more than it would have if per capita revenues had
only grown at the rate of inflation since 1983. That’s true even during
shorter, more recent time periods. From 2003 to 2016, Illinois collected an
average of $5.4 billion a year in additional revenues per capita, well above
what the state would’ve brought in if revenue had only grown at the rate of
inflation since 2003.
- Illinois
politicians continue to spend more money than the state takes in: Despite
those plentiful revenues, Illinois has not had a balanced budget since 2001.
That problem will only worsen as the nearly $170 billion in unfunded
promises made to state-worker retirements come due. Pension costs alone now
consume 25 percent of the entire state general fund budget.
- Politicians’
spending priorities are misplaced: The state of Illinois spends a
significant portion of its budget on worker pay, health coverage and
pensions, which has crowded out funding for core gov- ernment services.
Funding for state-employee pay and benefits increased by nearly 600 percent
from 2000 to 2015. That contrasts sharply with funding for core services,
which have stagnated during that same period. Higher education spending is
down 8 percent, human services funding is up only 10 per- cent, public
safety spending is up 12 percent, and funding for K-12 education is up 35
percent.
- Record tax
hikes didn’t fix Illinois’ budget problems: The massive 2011-2014 income-tax
hike did nothing to solve Illinois’ fiscal crisis or fund social services.
Instead, that revenue fueled Illinois’ failed spending priorities:
government-worker pay and benefits. Politicians doubled payments to pen-
sions during those four years, while funding for K-12 and higher education
actually fell by nearly 10 percent.
Without
significant reforms in the way state government operates, primary spending
drivers such as state-worker compensation will continue to crowd out funding for
other services.
But tax hikes
aren’t the solution. Any tax increases will only put additional pressure on
overburdened taxpayers and encourage more residents to seek opportunities in
other states. Illinois already has the fourth-highest state and local tax burden
as a percentage of income, and that includes the highest property taxes in the
nation.
The reality is,
unless Illinois reforms its core cost drivers and reinvigorates its economy, the
state’s finances – and its tax base – will continue to deteriorate.
ILLINOIS HAS MORE THAN ENOUGH TAX REVENUE
Since 1983, the
year Madigan became Illinois House speaker, the state’s per capita tax revenue
growth has consistently outpaced increases in inflation.
The state’s per
capita general fund revenues have grown by an average rate of 3.7 percent each
year. That’s faster than the 2.7 percent average annual inflation growth over
that period.
What might seem
like a small difference between tax revenues and inflation – a 1 percentage
point difference in growth – adds up to billions of taxpayer dollars when
compounded over 33 years.
Over the entire
period, state per capita tax revenues grew by nearly 236 percent, while
inflation rose by just 139 percent.
As a result of
this difference, over the last 33 years Illinois’ government has had $265
billion more in revenues than what it would have had if state per capita tax
revenues had simply grown on pace with inflation. That means that, on average,
the state collected $8 billion in additional tax revenues per year compared to
if revenues had only grown at the rate of inflation.
All of this has
had a significant effect on Illinois’ 2016 tax revenues.
In 1983, Illinois
collected $8.4 billion in total general fund revenues. Over the next 33 years,
had those tax revenue collections simply grown at the rate of population plus
inflation, the state would have collected $22.7 billion in 2016.
Instead, the
state expects to collect approximately $32 billion in 2016, or $9 billion more.
That $9 billion is larger than the state’s appropriation to its K-12 education
budget and larger than the state’s current unpaid bill backlog.
Recent revenue growth
More recent
budget numbers from 2003 to 2016 tell a similar story.
From 2003 to
2016, Illinois state government collected more than $70 billion in additional
tax revenues compared to what it would have taken in had state tax revenues
simply grown at a pace of inflation plus population growth since 2003. That
means, on average, the state collected $5 billion in additional tax revenues per
year compared to if revenues had only grown at inflation.
In 2016 alone,
the state will have an additional $1.3 billion in tax revenues when compared to
what it would have had if state tax revenues had grown at the same rate as
inflation plus population since 2003. That surplus exists even after taking into
account the large drop in state income-tax receipts due to the partial sunset of
the 2011 tax hike.
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Taxpayer
incomes can’t keep up with taxes
Unfortunately, not only have state per capita tax revenues grown
faster than inflation, but they’ve also surpassed the growth in
Illinoisans’ incomes.
Per
capita state tax revenues grew 236 percent versus the 131 percent
growth in median household incomes from 1984 to 2016.
When
adjusted for inflation, Illinoisans experienced growth in incomes
from 1984 through 1999, though incomes have collapsed since then.
Overall, Illinois’ 2014 median household incomes are only up
slightly when compared to 1984.
Today, median family incomes are treading water, at best. The
collapse in workers’ incomes since 1999, coupled with anemic jobs
growth, leaves no room for the burden of additional tax hikes.
ILLINOIS POLITICIANS CONTINUE TO SPEND MORE MONEY THAN THE STATE
TAKES IN
Illinois’ overspending habits are exemplified by the last 15 years
of negative budgetary balance – despite the fact that the Illinois
Constitution requires a balanced budget.
The
last year Illinois had a truly balanced budget was 2001, according
to the Illinois Comptroller.
That’s because, rather than spend within the state’s means, Illinois
politicians have consistently used gimmicks – shifting funds and
pushing off unpaid bills into the next year – to get around the
Illinois Constitution’s balanced budget requirement.
As a
result, the state continues to spend more than it takes in; Illinois
had more than $7 billion in unpaid bills as of June 2016.
Unfortunately, the state’s unpaid bills are just the visible
deficits that can be found in the annual oper- ating budget.
The
true extent of Illinois’ out-of-control spending is hidden in the
form of retirement benefits that have been granted to government
workers.
The
present value of the total pension benefits promised to state
workers has grown at the incredible pace of 9 percent annually since
1987, to $191 billion in 2015 from just $18 billion in 1987.
That
growth rate far surpasses the growth rates of state revenues,
inflation and taxpayer incomes during the same period.
Unfortunately the state has set aside only $80 billion of the $191
billion it needs to have today to pay for state workers’ future
benefits, meaning there is $111 billion in pension debt that has yet
to be funded.
Due
to the combination of pension benefit growth and underfunding,
pension costs now consume more than 25 percent of the state’s
general fund annual budget, up from just 8 percent in 2004.
The
state has also promised retirement health care benefits to state
workers. The cost of those promises now stands at over $56 billion,
nearly half the size of Illinois’ unfunded pension debt. But unlike
pensions, Illinois has no money set aside to pay for those future
health care costs. Without reforms, those massive and growing costs
will continue to crowd out spending for other core government pro-
grams including education and social programs.
In
total, there’s an additional $170 billion in debt for state-employee
benefits that have yet to be paid for.
POLITICIANS’ SPENDING PRIORITIES ARE MISPLACED
Because Illinois politicians continue to resist enacting major
spending and pension reforms, much of Illinois’ spending is
programmed to rise automatically. That means the major cost drivers,
including pensions, state-worker benefits and Medicaid, are crowding
out core government services.
In
2015, total state tax revenues were $13 billion, or 57 percent,
higher than they were in 2000. That growth contrasts sharply with
how funding for several key items changed between 2000 and 2015.
-
Pension contributions: up 586 percent, or $6.6 billion
-
Employee insurance: up 166 percent, or $1 billion
-
Medicaid: up 141 percent, or $5.4 billion
These
cost drivers automatically grow year after year. By law, their
growth is prioritized over other core services including social
services and education. This is reflected in the dramatically lower
growth in spending in those core services over the 2000-2015 period:
-
Higher education: reduced by 8 percent, or $175 million
-
Human services: up only 10 percent, or $498 million
-
K-12 education: up only 35 percent, or $1.7 billion
Since
2000, politicians’ spending on employee compensation and other cost
drivers has not only outpaced spending on various core services, but
in some cases actually caused some services, such as higher
education, to lose funding.
Tax-hike proponents argue that tax revenues will solve this problem,
but this pattern of misplaced priorities cannot be fixed by
additional tax revenues. The budgets of the last 15 years show that,
despite more than adequate tax revenues, Illinois politicians will
avoid reforms and overspend on their favored programs rather than
provide for the social and core services they verbally champion.
TAX HIKES HAVEN’T FIXED ILLINOIS’ BUDGET PROBLEMS
In
2011, Illinois politicians enacted a record 67 percent
personal-income-tax hike and a 46 percent corporate-income-tax hike.
The tax increases were designed to last for four years, partially
sunsetting in 2015 before sunsetting fully in 2025.
Springfield politicians promised the additional $32 billion in
revenues from the hike would be used to resolve the pension crisis,
pay down the state’s unpaid bills, and fix the state’s budget.
But
the hike accomplished just the opposite of its stated intent: The
pension crisis wasn’t fixed, Illinois’ bills weren’t paid down, and
spending for other government services either decreased or stayed
relatively flat.
This
boost in revenues allowed politicians to avoid any real reforms.
Instead, those additional revenues were funneled to state-worker pay
and pensions – with politicians making no effort to comprehensively
reform Illinois workers’ pensions or the state’s spending habits.
Even
an extra $32 billion in revenue didn’t stop politicians from
prioritizing pensions over many need- ed core services. Lawmakers
grew funding for pensions by 118 percent, while funding for
education fell by 8 percent for K-12 and 10 percent for public
universities and community colleges.
Illinois politicians squandered the tax-hike revenue by throwing
that money at the pensions they failed to reform. Now tax-hike
proponents are coming back for more, demanding more tax revenues to
supposedly fund the social programs they’ve effectively ignored for
years in favor of worker pay and benefits.
Until
lawmakers enact significant governance, financial and economic
reforms and learn to live within the state’s means, they don’t
deserve the right to ask taxpayers for more money.
CONCLUSION
The
2016 battle over Illinois’ budget is the culmination of years of
fiscal mismanagement.
Despite the receipt of more than enough tax revenues to fund core
government services, lawmakers have consistently spent more than the
state has taken in. And rather than ensure that social services and
other vital programs are prioritized, they’ve made state-worker pay
and benefits untouchable.
That’s why Illinois isn’t funding its social services and
universities even though the state will spend at near record levels
in 2016.
Without significant reforms to the way state government operates,
this crowding out will continue. Expenses will continue to outpace
inflation and population growth and the incomes of the taxpayers
that fund government.
Illinois needs a balanced budget, not through tax hikes, but rather
through an honest prioritization of spending and real economic
growth. Here are some key reforms Illinois must pursue:
-
Lower the cost of government by creating a more realistic
retirement plan for state workers, as well as a collection of
other reforms, including optional 401(k)-style plans for
existing employees.
-
Demand a truly balanced budget to ensure spending doesn’t
outpace revenues.
-
Push for consolidation of Illinois’ more than 7,000 units of
government, starting with merging many of the state’s 859 school
districts.
-
Reform how Illinois delivers K-12 education to children and
demand public universities cut administrative costs.
-
Reform Medicaid spending practices to deliver better care and
save taxpayer dollars.
-
Pass a spending cap to keep core cost drivers such as employee
compensation in check.
Economic
-
Reduce the overall property-tax burden to make Illinois more
affordable.
-
Reform Illinois’ workers’ compensation system so it is more in
line with those in other states.
-
Reduce the burden of occupational licensing on small businesses
and entrepreneurs.
-
End prevailing-wage laws, which harm Illinois’ manufacturing
sector.
The
reality is, unless Illinois reforms its core cost drivers and
reinvigorates its economy, no amount of tax revenue will ever be
enough.
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