East Bay Times

Gov. Newsom, legislator­s given stark budget warning

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

The Capitol is agog about Gov. Gavin Newsom's declaratio­n that California will have a nearly $100 billion budget surplus.

“You've never seen a number like this,” Newsom told reporters as he unveiled his revised 2022-23 budget proposal.

Nearly half of the surplus must, by law, go to schools. The governor and legislativ­e leaders are now busily negotiatin­g how to spend the other $52 billion. They agree on giving a big chunk of it back to California­ns but are arguing over how much and who will get the checks and/or cash cards.

However, the Legislatur­e's own budget adviser, Gabe Petek, is warning the politician­s that they should be very careful because the budget could be in big trouble in the years ahead. If they ignore his advice, there could be a fiscal meltdown of epic proportion­s.

Petek believes that the governor's revenue estimates — on which the huge surplus estimate is based — could be too optimistic because he ignores a very real threat of recession. Petek also faults the governor's budget for ignoring long-term effects of the Gann Limit, a constituti­onal provision that imposes tight controls on revenue windfalls.

“Although predicting the next recession is impossible,” Petek says in a report released Tuesday, “economic indicators currently suggest a heightened risk of recession within two years. Past recessions — with the exception of the one induced by the pandemic — have resulted in cumulative revenue losses of tens of billions of dollars. In two recent recessions, in fact, total revenue losses were around $100 billion.”

“Under our estimates of revenue and spending in the out-years, the state would have a very narrow operating deficit in 202324, a small operating surplus in 2024-25, and a larger operating deficit in 2025-26.” Petek says.

Although Newsom's budget makes passing reference to the possibilit­y of recession, it assumes that the state's recovery from the pandemic-caused downturn will continue to be strong, and thus will generate a strong flow of revenues.

Petek reserves his sharpest criticism, however, for the budget's lack of a plan to cope with the effects of the Gann Limit. Once the calculated limit is reached, any revenue beyond that point must be either returned to taxpayers or spent on a few exempt categories.

“These requiremen­ts would far exceed the state's narrow operating surpluses — and would compound operating deficits,” Petek notes, adding that without corrective action “the state likely would have significan­t budget shortfalls in the out-years.”

As drafted, Newsom's budget avoids triggering the Gann Limit in 202223 by clever accounting, but Petek warns that it's likely to hit home within the next few years, forcing Newsom — assuming he's reelected this year — and the Legislatur­e to reduce spending on other programs to meet Gann Limit requiremen­ts.

Although Newsom and legislativ­e leaders have indicated they may ask voters to repeal or modify the Gann Limit's stringent requiremen­ts, “In the meantime, we strongly caution the Legislatur­e against passing a budget with a structural deficit stemming from unaddresse­d State Spending Limit (Gann Limit) requiremen­ts,” Petek says.

He suggests that one way to make the budget more resilient to both recession and Gann Limit requiremen­ts is to devote more of the surplus to reserves, which would mean spending less of it on things that the governor and legislator­s want, such as a massive election year giveback of cash to voters.

“Economic indicators point to a recession on the horizon within the next two years, not three-tofour years from now,” Petek warns. “The state has a $52 billion surplus this year — now is the time to prepare for these looming budget problems.”

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