State budget forecast shows deficits persist despite increased tax
collections
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[November 11, 2021]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – The latest five-year
projection for Illinois state government finances shows decreased
deficits, according to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s Office of Management and
Budget.
Experts said the rosy picture is propped up by temporary federal funds
at the taxpayers’ expense.
The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget released a financial
projection for the next five years showing tax revenues up and projected
deficits are down.
“The forecasted fiscal year 2023 shortfall was reduced from $2.9
billion, as estimated in 2019, to $406 million, and the 2024 shortfall
was reduced from $3.2 billion, as estimated in 2019, to a deficit of
$820 million,” according to the report.
“With our partners in the General Assembly we’ve made tremendous
progress in putting Illinois on the right fiscal path, supporting small
businesses, and creating good jobs in every part of our state,” Gov.
J.B. Pritzker said in a statement announcing the report.
The GOMB report says income and sales taxes exceeded budget forecasts by
“significant margins, leading to a $1.4 billion increase in the revenue
forecast from those sources.”
But, overspending will still persist with hundreds of millions in the
red every year. Deficit projections are $406 million for FY23, $802
million for FY24, $1.06 billion for FY25, $903 million for FY26 and $598
million for FY27.
As for spending controls, the GOMB report says Pritzker continues to
instruct agencies “to prudently manage operations.” But the projections
are also based on “no significant changes to base programs,” the report
says.
Wirepoints President Ted Dabrowski the belt needs to be further
tightened.
“Even when you look out in the projections to the years three, four and
five, we’re still running deficits of close to a billion dollars a year,
as if that’s something good.”
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Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at a news conference in Springfield on
Tuesday, June 1, 2021.
Courtesy of BlueRoomStream
Dabrowski said the governor makes it appear his administration and state
lawmakers are managing things, but the real story is the tens of
billions in federal taxpayer funds the state got.
“For individuals through stimulus checks, to the state government, local
governments, $180 billion and that’s the only reason the tax revenues
are up in Illinois,” Dabrowski said.
The state government got nearly $8.4 billion in COVID-19 relief. Around
$3 billion was budgeted this year for things “like infrastructure,
violence prevention, education, healthcare, affordable housing, and
economic recovery,” according to the GOMB report.
Dabrowski said the numbers don’t look good for taxpayers.
“Net, net, it’s not a good budget for Illinois,” Dabrowski said. “The
federal dollars might be hiding all the cracks, but the fiscal cliff
will be bigger when all the federal money is gone. He’s created more
pain for Illinois on top of the fact that we’re going to have massive
inflation and other tax hikes to pay back these programs.”
And, full recovery may have been achieved, but the report notes economic
expansion may be slow to grow.
“Though the economy at large has rebounded to pre-pandemic levels, the
labor market has had inconsistent recovery with only a few periods of
meaningful job growth,” the GOMB report said. “A full recovery is
uncertain until the pandemic ends.”
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