State general revenues top $50 billion for first time in FY 2022
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[July 08, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – State tax revenues grew by
$5.5 billion in the fiscal year that concluded on June 30, exceeding $50
billion for the first time in Illinois’ history, according to a new
report from a state budgeting agency.
The 12 percent base revenue growth in Fiscal Year 2022 gave lawmakers
near-unprecedented flexibility in the current budget year.
That allowed the General Assembly to approve $1.8 billion in tax relief,
pay $500 million more to state pensions than statutes require, retire
hundreds of millions of dollars in interest-accruing debts early, and
drive the state’s “rainy day” fund to its highest-ever balance of over
$1 billion.
It also helped the state reach a zero-day accounts payable cycle –
meaning it was caught up on its bills – for the first time in decades.
But the report from the Commission on Government Forecasting and
Accountability also noted that the pandemic-related drivers of growth,
which led to nationwide revenue windfalls for nearly all state
governments, are likely to wane in the coming months.
That’s something Gov. JB Pritzker told Capitol News Illinois last week
that lawmakers planned for in April when they projected Fiscal Year 2023
revenues at $46.5 billion – an 8 percent decrease from the final FY 2022
numbers.
“We wrote that into the budget, that is a decrease in revenue just in
this coming year,” Pritzker said in an interview. “So, we understand
that there were some temporary nature of revenues that were coming in.”
All told, the FY 2022 base revenues reached $50.3 billion without
including direct federal aid. The number jumps to $51.1 billion when
including a $736 million direct transfer-in of COVID-19 relief dollars.
The base revenues were nearly $8 billion beyond the May 2021 projections
on which the FY 2022 budget was based. Personal and corporate income tax
grew $6.1 billion beyond what was projected in May 2021, while sales tax
revenues were about $979 million beyond projections.
While the revenue windfalls won’t alleviate longstanding budget
pressures such as a $130 billion unfunded pension liability that demands
about a quarter of state general revenue funds each year, it’s a level
of good financial news that Illinoisans are not accustomed to hearing –
and a level of progress Pritzker has hung his hat on as he seeks a
second term.
“A significant surplus and a zero-day payment cycle mean that our
schools are funded, our roads are being rebuilt, and our healthcare
providers are paid on time – and Illinois taxpayers are no longer
dealing with hundreds of millions of dollars in interest payments
because government didn’t do its job,” Pritzker said in a statement last
week. “Illinois’ massive bill backlog – eliminated since I came into
office – once contained bills past due for as long as 500 days.”
The COGFA report noted that even though direct federal aid was not
included in the base revenue calculation, the indirect effects of
federal stimulus played a major role in the unexpected growth.
So major, in fact, that revenue came in beyond initial projections in 49
states in the fiscal year.
One driving factor, according to the report, was the “continuation of a
pandemic-related shift” in consumer spending from non-taxed
service-based sales to taxable goods, which created “strong market
conditions” that led to increased tax revenues from corporate profits
and capital gains.
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A graphic from the Commission on Government
Forecasting and Accountability shows the growth in state revenues
for the recently completed fiscal year compared to projections from
last May. (Credit: cgfa.ilga.gov)
Republicans have also attributed the revenue spikes at least partially
to an “inflation-induced sugar high,” noting that as prices increase so
does sales tax revenue.
“The influence of these particular factors is expected to wane as the
state enters into FY 2023 resulting in reduced revenue expectations for
the upcoming fiscal year,” the COGFA report noted.
Still, June’s receipts remained strong, growing by $736 million compared
to the previous fiscal year.
As a result, final FY 2022 revenues were $2.6 billion higher than the
April estimate from the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget that
was used as the basis of this year’s budget negotiations.
A GOMB spokesperson said in an email Wednesday that the surplus has not
led to any discussion of amending the FY 2023 budget in the first week
of the new fiscal year. But it’s likely to allow for some flexibility.
“FY 2022 revenues continued to outperform expectations through the last
quarter of the fiscal year,” GOMB spokesperson Carol Knowles said in an
email. “This will allow the state to be better positioned in the coming
year as we continue to monitor the national economic outlook.”
Knowles noted that the higher-than-expected revenues contributed to the
improving fiscal situation which Comptroller Susana Mendoza and Pritzker
highlighted in a pair of news releases last week.
Those releases noted Illinois has erased its “bill backlog,” ending the
fiscal year with a general revenue funds payment cycle of zero days from
when vouchers are received by the state comptroller’s office.
The $1.8 billion accounts payable balance was a far cry from the height
of the state’s two-year budget impasse between Republican Gov. Bruce
Rauner and Democrats in the General Assembly, when the bill backlog
reached $16.7 billion.
Pritzker has also touted – and bond ratings agencies have noted – that
Illinois focused much of its spending of surplus dollars on relieving
interest-accruing debt. Illinois has seen six credit rating upgrades –
two each from each of the three major agencies – in the past year.
In a news release last week Pritzker contrasted those upgrades with the
eight downgrades the state received during the tenure of Rauner, whom
Pritzker unseated in 2018.
While the upgrades this year mark the first upward break from a downward
trend that began in the Blagojevich administration, Illinois remains in
the worst shape of all states as judged by the ratings agencies.
And while Illinois lawmakers dedicated $1 billion to the rainy day fund,
Mendoza said in a news release she’d push for laws mandating greater
contributions to budget stabilization funds when Illinois has
stronger-than-expected revenue performances in the future.
“The fact that we’ll have a billion dollars saved in our rainy day fund
to help us during adverse downturns certainly helps, but Illinois must
save more when we are able to with stronger-than-expected revenue
receipts so that we strengthen our ability to weather through these
unexpected crises,” she said.
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