ILLINOIS’
ECONOMY CONTINUES TO FALL BEHIND OTHER STATES, ACCORDING TO FISCAL
FORECAST
Illinois Policy Institute/
Vincent Caruso
The worst years of the Great Recession are
in the rear view. But if the latest gloomy fiscal forecast is any
indication, Illinois' persistent policy mistakes will drag down its
economic performance well into the future.
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A new report prepared for the Illinois Commission on Government
Forecasting and Accountability offers a grey portrait of Illinois’ current
economic condition, and a bleak forecast of its future.
The February report by Moody’s Analytics finds that despite some recent positive
strides, the Land of Lincoln’s post-recession economy remains stuck trailing its
neighbors and much of the rest of the country.
Passage of a two-years-past-due budget, income and employment growth, and a
robust apartment market are some areas the report highlights as relative bright
spots for Illinois’ economy. But gradual gains in employment and income that
have carried Illinois out of the recession have failed to keep pace with that of
the state’s peers, according to the report.
Illinois’ 4.7 percent employment increase over the last five years lags the
average increase of its Great Lakes neighbors and falls behind the national
average.
The Prairie State’s unemployment rate has diminished, having fallen to 4.8
percent in 2017 after being stuck at just under 6 percent for nearly two years.
However, the report cautions that “a large contraction in the labor force rather
than employment gains explains the apparent tightening.” Indeed, people were
dropping out of Illinois’ labor force by the tens of thousands in 2017.
In the long term, Illinois’ four-year trend of population loss, as well as the
state’s deep-rooted budgetary instability, will foreseeably continue to weigh on
the economy. Over the next five years, Moody’s estimates, the state’s employment
will grow at a rate below the national average and below the Midwest overall.
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Despite resources such as access to transportation
and an enviable talent pool, Illinois’ fiscal instability risks
discouraging businesses from scouting opportunities in the Land of
Lincoln, the report warns. While lawmakers have attempted to resolve
this with generous tax incentives, the Moody’s report advises
Springfield instead to “focus on more broad-based income tax reforms
and provide firms more certainty as to what their future tax burdens
might be.”
But it bears repeating that it isn’t just the private sector that
suffers during periods of hindered economic growth. The growing cost
of state-worker retirement benefits is projected to tighten
employment in the public sector, according to the report. Despite
funding increases for public works, “mounting pension obligations
will crimp state payrolls” and dampen government employment.
Of course, the Moody’s report is far from one of a kind. In fact,
unsatisfactory fiscal reports have proceeded to plague the state
with disturbing consistency.
Despite the severity of Illinois’ fiscal troubles, there exists a
number of sound, pro-growth reforms at lawmakers’ disposal should
they wish to reverse this trajectory. State officials’ failure to
respond to forecasts like Moody’s has meant continuing down the same
path of sluggish growth.
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