Wednesday, May 06, 2009

State Budget: Missing The Moving Target

The latest update on State tax revenue projections is grim.  Each time Pari Sabety's crew gets another round of revenue data their estimates bottom out even further.   The latest income tax numbers really stink.

Total tax receipts through March were about $200 million below revised estimates, and total income-tax collections for April alone were $322 million, or 22 percent, lower than the already-pessimistic projections...
Due to the cliff diving tax receipts a third round of budget cuts was announced in Tuesday by the administration.  With tax revenue in a tailspin Governor Strickland had no choice but to make deeper cuts to the current year budget, or what remains of it.  The latest reductions could total $900 million and will no doubt harm be felt by the already reeling local governments.   The fiscal year ends on June 30th at which time another beleaguered budget starts anew.

The question arose in my office today.  How can they continue to be off the mark by such a wide margin?  Could it be that no one in Columbus is willing to accept how detrimental an ailing economy couped with short sighted tax cuts can be to the State's revenue sources.  This episode reminds me of Nassim Taleb's book Fooled By Randomness .  The over reliance on historical data to predict where the bottom will be has not worked out to well.  This latest recessionary cycle has broken the mold.

No matter, the new budget will be anything but fresh.  In order to staunch the deficit flow Ohio will have to tap the budget reserve fund (rainy day fund) before the end of the fiscal year.  That means there will be less of those much touted one-time revenue available for the FY 2010 budget.  The Senate Republicans are already complaining.  They will have to find the billion or so dollars needed to restore equilibrium to the next budget

There is now an inescapable fact staring the General Assembly in the collective face. You hear that State senators?    Some form of tax increase coupled with additional cuts to programs will have to be factored into the latest budget bill.  I can't think of another way out of the mess. 

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