Monterey Herald

State revenues soar as rich get richer

- By Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO >> At the end of 2020, California had lost a record 1.6 million jobs during the pandemic. Nearly a half-million people stopped even trying to look for work. Business properties saw their value plummet more than 30%.

But California’s bank account is overflowin­g. As of January, the state’s tax collection­s were $10.5 billion ahead of projection­s. By the end of the fiscal year on July 1, Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state Legislatur­e could have a $19 billion surplus to spend.

It’s so much money that, for just the second time ever, the state is projected to trigger a state law requiring the government to send refunds to taxpayers.

Economic downturns usually put state government­s in a bind, forcing them to cut services at a time when people need them most. That’s what happened a decade ago during the Great Recession when the housing market collapsed and the stock market tanked, creating a cascade of losses from the wealthy on down.

But this time, with the pandemic forcing the closure of bars, restaurant­s, theme parks, sporting events and small businesses, lower-wage workers bore the brunt of the losses while the wealthier worked from home. The economic losses started at the bottom of the income ladder and so far they haven’t made their way up to the top.

That’s put states like California, with a tax code that relies heavily on the rich, in a strange place. A year ago, state lawmakers thought this downturn would behave

like other downturns. They cut spending, raised taxes on some businesses, borrowed money and pulled from the state’s savings account — all to prepare for having less money.

But the state’s revenues went up. And billions of dollars from the federal government, which paid for things like hotel rooms for the homeless and homedelive­red meals for seniors,

also softened the blow.

“This isn’t a recession that was driven by economic failures, this is a recession driven by a global pandemic,” said Chris Hoene, executive director of the California Budget and Policy Center. “It just has different structural elements to it.”

Unlike most states, California taxes capital gains — mostly money made from investment­s and stocks — the same as money made from wages and salaries. The result is 1% of the population accounts for nearly half of the state’s income tax collection­s.

That 1% had a pretty good year in 2020, financiall­y speaking. The stock market is 16% above its pre-pandemic high in February 2020. A slew of California tech companies, led by Airbnb and DoorDash, debuted on the stock market last year, adding to the

state’s population of millionair­es and billionair­es.

The Newsom administra­tion projects California­ns will earn $185 billion from capital gains — the most ever — resulting in $18.5 billion in tax revenue for the state.

“It does point to an overrelian­ce of a very small population of taxpayers,” said David Kline, spokesman for the California Taxpayers Associatio­n, which favors limited taxation. “In general, you want a broad base of taxpayers at the lowest rate possible.”

But California’s windfall means it can increase spending at a time when many people can’t. Last week, Newsom signed off on $7.6 billion in new spending, including more than $2 billion in grants for struggling small businesses and $3.6 billion to send $600 one-time payments to nearly 5.7 million people.

That 1% had a pretty good year in 2020, financiall­y speaking. The stock market is 16% above its pre-pandemic high in February 2020.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks about his 2021-2022 state budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento California is billions of dollars ahead of its tax collection­s projection­s despite many people being out of work because of the pandemic. California lost 1.6 million jobs in 2020 and nearly half a million people stopped looking for work.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks about his 2021-2022 state budget proposal during a news conference in Sacramento California is billions of dollars ahead of its tax collection­s projection­s despite many people being out of work because of the pandemic. California lost 1.6 million jobs in 2020 and nearly half a million people stopped looking for work.

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