Former state comptroller criticizes Illinois’ budget dishonesty
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[April 07, 2021]
By Cole Lauterbach
(The Center Square) – Even though the
state’s Constitution requires it, Illinois hasn’t passed a truly
balanced budget in decades.
The state’s former comptroller says the situation has worsened to the
point of bankruptcy if it were allowed.
Former Illinois Comptroller Leslie Munger, in a presentation to the
Governmental Accounting Standards Board last month, said politicians
aren’t generally accountants or economists and often approve of
mathematical slights-of-hand to claim they’re passing balanced budgets.
“It allows them to look at things and think they’re balanced and this is
how we end up with a mess,” she said.
She mentioned borrowed funds being labeled as revenue as another common
accounting trick the state uses to create the perception of a balanced
budget. Others in state government have criticized this trick as well.
Illinois is facing more than $140 billion in unfunded pension liability,
$50 billion in expected retiree health care costs, $3 billion in federal
pandemic borrowing, and billions more in unpaid bills.
“We are a state that, if we could be bankrupt, we would be bankrupt,”
Munger said.
Even with a slow infusion of billions of dollars in federal COVID-19 aid
money, state officials have said it wouldn’t be enough to truly
rightsize the state’s accounts.
There is a proposal from a bipartisan group of lawmakers that would
limit state spending to economic factors. Senate Bill 589 says “the rate
of growth of general funds appropriations shall not exceed the rate of
growth of the Illinois median household income.” It has yet to be heard
in committee.
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Illinois Comptroller Leslie Geissler Munger listens to a question
during a news conference on the state budget Thursday, July 14,
2016, in Chicago.
AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast
Illinois Comptroller Suzana Mendoza didn’t respond to a request for
comment on Munger’s presentation. Mendoza has warned lawmakers and
others about the perils of treating federal aid like “Christmas” and
using it to boost funding on pet projects.
Illinois lawmakers have until the end of June to send Gov. J.B. Pritzker
a budget.
Pritzker, who has critiqued past budgets as being “balanced in name
only,” is proposing a budget he referred to as balanced thanks to flat
spending and closing a number of tax incentives on the state’s
businesses. Like budgets in the past, he doesn’t factor in the state’s
legacy debt as Munger suggests. It does propose statutorily-set
contributions.
Munger's office didn't formally oppose former Gov. Bruce Rauner's
proposed FY 2017 budget, though a Civic Federation analysis found it
carried a $3.4 billion deficit. Munger reached out after the publication
of this story stating that, as comptroller, she worked hard to follow
the law and to be consistent in her support of fiscal responsibility,
regardless of who was in charge.
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